Watched this movie while getting ready for school this morning. I wish I could start every day with a little Chaplin.
I wonder if this film would even be possible these days. It is very resonant, but the people in this film were so real and gracious. I think people now in the era of reality television wouldn't know how to be real. If I were making a film like this, I would suspect that most people that I came across were just acting for me and hamming it up for their 15 minutes.
I would like this movie so much more if I didn't find Diane Keaton so terribly annoying.
That's the word I would use to describe Noah Baumbach's films: awkward.
Even if Wes Anderson's movies were terrible, I would still watch them because they're always so beautiful!
What the hell was the point of that??
I have to admit that I don't understand this movie, but I am impressed by the bleakness and utter loss of hope in mankind I felt after seeing this movie. I would never watch it again under any circumstance, but maybe that's what they were going for.