Amelia (Catherine Keener) and Laura (Anne Heche) have been best friends since the sixth grade. For the first time, their lives are taking different paths: Laura is in love and planning her wedding, while Amelia begins to despair that she’ll ever find the right man. But as they try to adjust their childhood friendship to the challenges of adulthood, these friends continue to laugh together at life and love.
With her penchant for autobiography and assured grasp of the humor underlying quotidian existence, writer-director Nicole Holofcener has avoided the pitfalls of trite sentimentality in crafting her genuinely funny and moving films about the complex bonds between women.
The daughter of a stage-actor father and set-decorator mother, Holofcener grew up in New York City and Santa Monica, CA. Through her stepfather, Charles Joffe, Holofcener landed her first job in the movie industry as a production assistant on Woody Allen’s A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy (1982). Her aspirations solidified by her stint as an apprentice editor on Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), Holofcener got her graduate degree in film at Columbia University in the late ‘80s, where her sly student short Angry already presaged her ability to turn her personal experiences into smart comedy.
It took Holofcener six years, however, to make her first feature. Based on her conflicted emotions over her best friend’s impending… read more
this should be the template for the rom-coms of the future. instead of pixie dream girls, homoerotic panic, broad bathroom humor and normative horseshit, this is a movie where men and women actually enjoy each other's company. it's sad to think that most of these actors went on to play cartoon versions of the "types" established here. makes the last decade of "indie" cinema seem regressive by comparison.
The scene when Amelia is stalking that dude with Liz Phair playing in the background really speaks to me because I would totally do that. ~RELATABLE~