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The Other Woman

Love and Other Impossible Pursuits

United States

2009

97 Min
Color
2.35:1
English
  • Currently 2.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Don Roos

EXEC Dan Bucatinsky, Noel Lohr, Natalie Portman, Rena Ronson

PROD Carol Cuddy, Marc Platt

SCR Don Roos, Ayelet Waldman

DP Steve Yedlin

CAST Natalie Portman, Lisa Kudrow, Lauren Ambrose, Anthony Rapp, Scott Cohen, Charlie Tahan, Daisy Tahan, Debra Monk, Michael Cristofer, Elizabeth Marvel

ED David Codron

PROD DES Michael Shaw

MUSIC John Swihart

Toronto (Gala)

Synopsis

Emilia Woolf (Natalie Portman) is a Harvard law school graduate and a newlywed, having just married Jack, her high-powered New York lawyer boss (Scott Cohen). Her life takes an unexpected turn when the couple loses their newborn daughter. Emilia struggles through her grief to connect with her precocious new stepson William (Charlie Tahan), overcome a rift in her relationship with her father caused by his infidelity, and cope with the constant interferences of Jack’s angry, jealous ex-wife (Lisa Kudrow). An adaptation of an Ayelet Waldman novel, this tearful and terrific tale by writer-director Don Roos proves that even with a pursuit like love, nothing is impossible. —TIFF

Director

Original

Don Roos

A screenwriter turned director, Don Roos made his celebrated directorial debut with the 1998 The Opposite of Sex, a black comedy that provided hilarious and politically incorrect insights on the nature of love and sex from the point of view of a teen-from-hell anti-heroine (Christina Ricci). One of the year’s most acclaimed films, Roos described it as “a post-AIDS kind of tale from the late ’50s when there was the pill until AIDS there was a feeling that sex was careless and free and inconsequential and this movie has a different point of view.”
Born in New York on April 14, 1955, Roos first became involved with screenwriting while an undergraduate at the University of Notre Dame, where he took a screenwriting course. Following graduation, he moved to Hollywood in 1978 and spent the next eight years writing and producing for television. During a sabbatical he wrote the screenplay for Love Field, which was made into a 1991 film starring Michelle Pfeiffer in an Oscar-nominated performance… read more

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nowhere_fast

24Nov11

bad, bad. I think it's really depressive and sad, and in the aftwer words, it made me cry so bad.

Picture of Marta

Marta

23Nov11

Portman was outstandind yet I feel like they charged the plot too much and then didn't developed it properly due to the material wich was just too much and didn't allow to focus properly one just one thing. Struggling with the loss of a child plus how to be a good stepmother plus daddy issues are three different movies, don't mash stuff up and then just shake it!

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Westley

8Oct11

The last 10 minutes of the movie ruined it for me. Total cop-out ending.

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Juan Barquin

13Apr11

You know, I really don't see where all the hatred for the film comes from. Portman was spectacular in this and played a much more realistic character than what she's usually given and she works very well with a decent script that deals with an emotional subject like the loss of a child and the effects that can have on a person.

Amy likes this

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    Amy

    8May11

    i just think people aren't used to focusing on "the other woman" - wait for my review on May17th ;D

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By David Hudson on February 4, 2011

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TIFF 2009 Review

By Owen Sound on October 26, 2009

It’s painful for the audience to watch because all of Emilia’s “mistakes” and “problems” are excruciatingly obvious and while she must find out for herself the journey she takes is frustrating and…  read review

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