Storyline
A struggling comedy writer, fresh off a breakup and in the midst of the worst year of his life, returns to Sacramento to care for his dying mother.
Cast: Jesse Plemons -
David
Zach Woods -
Paul
Bradley Whitford -
Norman
Maude Apatow -
Alexandra
Molly Shannon -
Joanne
Madisen Beaty -
Rebeccah
Retta -
Nina
Kerri Kenney -
Aunt Lynne
Paul Dooley -
Ronnie
June Squibb -
Ruth-Anne
J.J. Totah -
Justin
D'Arcy Carden -
Jessica
Alison Rich -
Melanie
John Early -
Gabe
Stephanie Langnas -
Wine Bar Patron
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 3 Jan 2016
Filming Locations: Los Angeles, California, USA
Technical Specs
Runtime:
User Review
Author:
Rating: 8/10
If this were a bigger movie, Molly Shannon might soon be getting a few
Big League nominations. She might anyway. Who expected Sally O'Malley
to inhabit a fully formed married Sacramento mom of three older
children, dying of cancer? Miss Shannon is funny and painful and
riveting to watch as she shows us her love and rage and pride in her
kids and worry about their future, and frustration with her failing
body and nice clueless husband, and her wish to just sometimes give up
and die already. It takes a deeply skilled actor to hide nothing, be
still, and let the camera have it's way with you. Who knew? She gets a
lot of help from Jesse Plemons as her struggling gay son David who is
hurting from his own heavy baggage. Mr. Plemons' face is our guide to
this family, not acting, just letting us tag along and marvel at his
devotion to his sick Mom.
A terrific young group of fun talented stars of tomorrow fill in the
family and church and choir and other Sacramentoes and the likes of
Paul Dooley, June Squibb, Bradley Whitford and an Apatow kid make
Director Chris Kelly's already superb script better.
Funny laugh out loud bits and great private one-on-ones that don't feel
rushed. No sitcom feel or fake intimacy in Other People. These people
matter to one another.
Other People brought back for me those intimate moments in Carmela
Soprano's kitchen when another complicated family was trying to have
closeness and understanding at the dinner table. Aren't we all?
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