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| MatchFlick Member Reviews |
 4 reviews / review this flick
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Margot at the Wedding (2007)
description written by member Zara:
The film will be a multigenerational story that takes place over a weekend and follows a mom and her son who visit the mom's sister. Kidman and Leigh will play the sisters.
| Release Date: | November 16th, 2007 |
| MPAA Rating: | R |
| Running Time: | 92 minutes |
| Directed By: | |
| Written By: | |
| Starring: | | |
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| Margot at the Wedding Movie Review by Christie (6/1/2008) |
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I have been in an independent/lesser known movie streak lately and have found some real gems, this is not one of them. Towards the middle/end of the film I had to pause it and when I returned (10 min later) I found I just didn't care about the characters or what happened to them. Kidman was unlikable and changed...
(complete Margot at the Wedding review by Christie)
| Margot at the Wedding Movie Review by Ben (12/24/2007) |
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Noah Baumbach must have had one messed up childhood. A year or two ago, he gave us "The Squid and the Whale" which chronicled a divorce filled with animosity, and the effect it ended up having on the kids. Now he gives us "Margot at the Wedding," which focuses on two sisters who do their best not to explode at each other....
(complete Margot at the Wedding review by Ben)
| Margot at the Wedding Movie Review by Douglas (12/10/2007) |
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Considering personal history, a movie about an intelligent but neurotic, unstable, and likely-alcoholic mother has the potential to cut right to my heart. Add to that a cast including Nicole Kidman, Jennifer Jason Leigh and John Turturro, and it sounds like a guaranteed recipe for success. Sadly, I found this film to be...
(complete Margot at the Wedding review by Douglas)
| Margot at the Wedding Movie Review by Jarrod (11/22/2007) |
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'Margot at the Wedding' seems to me like an Americanized version of an Eric Rohmer film, with characters that are bitterer and more disagreeable, but smart and able to express themselves eloquently, and dialogue is really all we have here, often very candid dialogue that expresses contempt and frustration. It is a step...
(complete Margot at the Wedding review by Jarrod)
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