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Friends With Kids
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| Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
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September 8, 2016 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $8.60 | $2.60 |
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November 12, 2012 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $9.39 | $4.62 |
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| Genre | Romantic Comedy |
| Format | AC-3, Multiple Formats, Color, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC |
| Contributor | Jennifer Westfeldt, Joey McFarland, Maya Rudolph, Chris O'Dowd, Riza Aziz, Edward Burns, Joshua Astrachan, Lucy Barzun Donnelly, Jake Kasdan, Jon Hamm, Megan Fox, Adam Scott, Kristen Wiig See more |
| Language | English |
| Runtime | 1 hour and 47 minutes |
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About the Company
Combining the STARZ premium global subscription platform with world-class motion picture and television studio operations, Lionsgate (NYSE: LGF.A, LGF.B) brings a unique and varied portfolio of entertainment to consumers around the world. Its film, television, subscription, location-based entertainment and interactive games businesses are backed by a 17,000-title library and one of the largest collections of film and television franchises. A digital age company driven by its entrepreneurial culture and commitment to innovation, the Lionsgate brand is synonymous with bold, original, relatable entertainment for the audiences it serves worldwide.
Lionsgate’s motion picture business is a consistent box office market share leader with films that have released worldwide over the past six years. This leadership is driven by world-class talent relationships, a deep and renewable portfolio of iconic brands and franchises, and a diverse and balanced slate that is built to enhance consumer enjoyment of the theatrical experience but also has the flexibility to utilize a broad range of alternative release strategies as the opportunities to monetize films continue to expand. The creator, owner and distributor of great film brands including The Hunger Games, Twilight Saga, John Wick, Now You See Me, Knives Out, La La Land, Saw, Dirty Dancing and Monster’s Ball, among many others, films released by Lionsgate and its predecessor companies have earned 129 Academy Award nominations and 32 Oscar wins.
Product Description
Product Description
Friends With Kids is a daring and poignant ensemble comedy about a close-knit circle of friends at that moment in life when children arrive and everything changes. The last two singles in the group observe the effect that kids have had on their friends' relationships and wonder if there's a better way. They decide to have a kid together - and date other people. There are big laughs and unexpected emotional truths as this unconventional 'experiment' leads everyone in the group to question the nature of friendship, family and, finally, true love.
Amazon.com
Hitching an agreeable ride on the long coattails (or maybe gown trains) of Bridesmaids, Friends with Kids isn't in the same category of grown-up raunch, but it does occupy a similar realm of grown-up comedy about the contemporary late-30s crowd facing serious relationship issues with intelligence and aplomb. It's also a stroke of good fortune that Friends with Kids features a hefty portion of the same cast that made Bridesmaids such a hit. The stars of Friends with Kids are Jennifer Westfeldt (who also wrote and directed) and Adam Scott as Julie and Jason, BFFs who are strictly platonic but decide to have a child together out of mutual need, convenience, and familiarity. Their married friends have all brought kids into the world with mixed results, and they feel a little left out. Neither wants the burden of marriage and both profess to have no romantic inclination toward the other, even though it's pretty clear from the first scenes that the script is heading for a very predictable romantic conclusion. That's no spoiler, and it's also no sappy or formulaic rom-com equation. Julie and Jason make a successful go of co-raising their adorable little boy, sharing care and feeding duties from the safety of their individual upscale New York apartments that are on different floors of the same building. Concurrently with their parenting, each one is also playing the same old dating game that ranges from simple hookups to what looks like true love when Julie meets Kurt (Edward Burns) and Jason meets Mary Jane (Megan Fox). That's when the emotions start getting complicated and both realize that they may not have thought through their child-rearing plan or their honest feelings for each other thoroughly enough. Their married friends Ben and Missy and Alex and Leslie are played by Jon Hamm, Kristen Wiig, Chris O'Dowd, and Maya Rudolph, who were part of the outstanding core cast of Bridesmaids. The entire ensemble in Friends with Kids is also pretty terrific in conveying a sense of how life and relationships change with time (and with kids). Alex and Leslie become stronger because of kids, Ben and Missy are torn apart, and Julie and Jason fall somewhere in between. Westfeldt's script and direction give a fairly New York-centric view of dating and relationships, which may grate on some people's nerves (movie New Yorkers can often seem like stereotypical snooty jerks). The movie doesn't always come across as unique from a stylistic perspective, and Westfeldt often steps into Woody Allen territory in her portrayal of New York neuroses. But she also brings her own gracefully original touch to the unfolding emotions. The dialogue is sharp and the comic sheen often belies a genuinely moving dramatic core. Even if it's sometimes hard to relate to these privileged, beautiful New York people whose only problems stem from their love life, Friends with Kids carries an honest heart of humor and modern romantic clout. --Ted Fry
Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 1.6 ounces
- Item model number : 25327491
- Director : Jennifer Westfeldt
- Media Format : AC-3, Multiple Formats, Color, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Run time : 1 hour and 47 minutes
- Release date : July 17, 2012
- Actors : Jennifer Westfeldt, Jon Hamm, Megan Fox, Maya Rudolph, Kristen Wiig
- Subtitles: : English, Spanish
- Producers : Jennifer Westfeldt, Jake Kasdan, Joey McFarland, Lucy Barzun Donnelly, Riza Aziz
- Studio : Lionsgate
- ASIN : B007L6VMDK
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #28,578 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #1,156 in Romance (Movies & TV)
- #3,468 in Comedy (Movies & TV)
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PS Now that I see how many not great reviews the movie got I want to say more. It is a really good movie. If a movie isn't what you expected, that shouldn't count against the movie. So change all of those comments to no comments and the ratings go way up because the movie is funny. It even has one of the funniest moments I have ever seen in a moivie. Can't give it away but I am sure everyone laughs outloud at that moment.
"Friends" tells the story of Jason (Adam Scott) and Julie (Jenifer Westfeldt), who find that their friends - couples Ben (Jon Hamm) and Missy (Kristin Wiig) and Alex (Chris O'Dowd) and Leslie (Maya Rudolph) - have become caught up in married life and the demands of raising kids. The plot goes pretty much as could be predicted. Jason and Julie decide to have a baby but not to get married and to continue looking for their "true loves." In due course, Jason meets Mary Jane (Megan Fox) and Julie meets Kurt (Edward Burns). Of course, in the end, in true rom-com tradition, the audience realizes that Jason and Julie are truly made for each other, and it is only a matter of time before Julie and Jason realize that for themselves.
Formulaic? Absolutely, but that is not a criticism. There is a reason for formulas and when they work - as they do here - they can pack an unexpected dramatic wallop. What such formulas require is likeable and believeable characters, and this "Friends with Kids" delivers. For sure, they are beautiful Manhattanites who have an almost central casting quality about them. However, they are more than that.
Ben and Missy start as insufferably loving and snarky, but as their marriage begins to disintegrate their agony and bitterness become palpable and it is hard not to feel their pain. Alex and Leslie are more typically everyman. They shout at each other - albeit with more curse words than you would hear among sailors on a troopship - and argue over the kids and the housework and all the things couples typically fight over, but their genuine love for each other is touching and they bring a reassuring sense of stability to a cast of characters who otherwise seem emotionally untethered.
Then, of course, there is Jason and Julie. The gut level response to both is that they live for little more than the moment and the next night on the town. However, even before they hatch their grand plan, both show an unexpected humanity. Jason is shown playing with Alex and Leslie's little boy and seeming to enjoy it. Julie plays a word game with Jason in which she reveals that she would rather lose her own life than watch someone she loves suffer. In fact, both are good people who are lost and need each other to find their better selves. Again formula, but it is hard not to like and root for these characters.
In the end, the most striking thing in all of this is how the film thematically takes the audience on a long ride through New York self-satisfaction and, dare we say it, liberalism only to end up reaffirming fairly traditional values. In a sadly politically conscious age, conservative viewers will wince when Jason denounces organized religion and George W. Bush, but they shouldn't. By the film's last reel, Jason and Julie find themselves deciding to be togther with their child in a (more or less) traditional family relationship. If this is a film that is supposed to queston traditional notions of love and family, it should have come up with a significantly different ending. It does not, and so what makes it daring is the fact that it tests alternative relationships and finds them wanting. Whodda thunk it?
The acting in the film is terrific. No other word applies. Jon Hamm and Kristin Wiig are agonizingly poignant as the couple whose mariage is falling apart. The viewer almost wants to look away so painful is Hamm's protrayal of Ben's rising bitterness and unhappiness. Kristin Wiig's similar handling of Missy's sense of loneliness and abandonment is spot on. This is not just another typical Hollywood handling of ruined marraiges and ruined lives. This is painful and biting.
By contrast, Maya Rudolph and Chris O'Dowd give the audience a couple who are just instantly likeable because they are so human. This is no lovey-dovey married couple who stroll arm and arm through life. They fight. They say dumb things. They embarrass each other, but still they work on their marriage and actually love each other. In a similar vein, Ed Burns and Megan Fox, though their characters are far less developed, come across as believeable and certainly work as the outside love interests for Julie and Jason.
However, the highest praise should absolutely go to Jennifer Westfledt and Adam Scott. Westfeldt, Jon Hamm's real life partner, besides being the film's screenwriter and producer, creates in Julie an absolutely endearing and loveable - in the literal sense - character. She is a devoted mother and the viewer can't help but sympathize with her as she comes to the increasing realization that Jason is the real love of her life. To watch as she falls almost absentmindedly in love and then to see her struggle with that love, is nothing short of powerful.
Adam Scott also performs brilliantly. Jason is not as instantly likeble as the more overtly emotional Julie, but Scott teases this out with effective subtelty. The viewer sees Jason as being superficially attracted to Mary Jane and it is easy to be dismissive of him as just another playboy - until you see the real pain and resentment in his face when he thinks that Kurt is getting close to his son. Suddenly, beneath the cavalier façade is a loving father who instictively resists having some other man in his family's life. Scott portrays this not just with words but with a masterful control of facial expression and tone of voice. He proves himself the consummate actor and deserves the highest accolades for his work in the film.
Screenwriter Westfeldt, other than perhaps relying a bit too much on a couple of soliloquies to move the plot along, scarcely puts a foot wrong. The viewer reaches the expected climax where Jason declares his love for Julie and there is a real sense of warmth and humanity that elevates the story above its formula driven expectations. There is what should be the closing kiss and then...Westfeldt blows it - and blows it badly.
The reviewer's code of conduct forbids revealing the ending of a movie, suffice to say that whole film schools should be dedicated to exploring why Westfeldt so badly mishandled the film's literally final seconds. It may have been because she thought she could avoid a formula ending. It may have been that she simply did not appreciate the natural dynamics of the kind of screenplay she was writing - or at least thought that she could avoid them. It may even be that she simply thought she was just getting a final laugh out of the audience as the movie does tend to veer a bit into sitcom every now and again.
Whatever the reason, the effect is to take her redeemed, decent and very human protagonists and reduce them in a split second to superficial, carnal and crude caricatures. In a film otherwise handled so deftly, it is almost a disaster. Not ruinous to be sure, but an incredible disappointment that will have the audience leaving the theater befuddled and deflated. They should be feeling warm and comforted and instead, if anything, they are probably worrying about what kind of upbringing Julie and Jason's son will get from these two rather base human beings, who after all they have been through seem to have ended up only where they started on the emotional maturity scale.
Friends with Kids is a good movie that is elevated by the absolutely spectacular acting of its leads. It is also oddly refreshing in its "through the back door" tribute to frankly good old fashioned values of family, love and devotion. Values not immediately apparent at first viewing given the film's stereotyped Manhattan sensibility. However, in the last seconds Westfeldt flies too close to the comedic sun and falls to Earth. So the bottom line is that Friends is absolutely worth seeing, but when the viewer gets to what should be the film's final kiss, he should run, not walk, from the theater.
I'm actually reviewing this because my sister and I are sick of seeing the SNL cast in everything. I like Kristen Wiig A LOT, but she gets so much work. Why not give this role to another actor? She's best at madcap comedy. She brought nothing to this part. So she wants to do some dramatic work--no doubt she'll get the chance!
Maya Rudolph: She's okay. She's Minnie Ripperton's daughter (a plus). There's nothing special about her--my opinion...everyone is entitled to their own--and she didn't bring anything to this role.
Whoever is casting these movies, give other actors a chance! I think I'm going to start boycotting stuff with SNL actors. Enough! already. I'm talking about most of them. I'd love to see more of Eddie Murphy, Garrett Morris, and others that we don't see ad nauseum.
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