Love After Love
United States
1156 people rated Following the death of their father, two sons deal with the trials of their own lives while watching their mother explore new beginnings of her own.
Drama
Romance
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
Kwesta
29/05/2023 16:40
source: Love After Love
user9416103087202
22/11/2022 16:05
The movie purports to be about grief. What we see is all the dysfunction expressed as projected rage, alcoholism, and all the function as "getting on with it." What we don't see is how the "grief" has transformed these people. We never get to see them transform. For all we know we may not be seeing just grief but personalities that have always been that way. It ain't pretty for the son's who dissolve into childishness, and it's hopeful for the widow who hews to maturity.
It certainly does not paint a nice picture of liberal elitists.
Yunge
22/11/2022 16:05
There's nothing to hate here ... it's a peculiar kind of movie, experiments and does something that to me was at first very displeasant, but after some time you understand what the movie is going for and I must say I ended up liking it very much. I'm young, so I don't know anything about this part of life, but I kept saying to myself ''man life's is going to be much harder''. I have to give special praise to the soundtrack. A very good slice(es) of life movie, I encourage everybody to watch this, don't listen to the bad reviews.
Eddie Kay
22/11/2022 16:05
Russell Harbaugh's debut feature is a raw and uncomfortable portrait of a family coping with loss. Its accurate depiction of grief and family drama is profoundly moving and Chris Teague's 16mm cinematography layers the performances with a beautiful degree of intimacy. Essential viewing for fans of independent films and powerhouse performances!
user903174192241
22/11/2022 16:05
This is not a bad movie. It is an atrocious movie! A complete and utter waste of time, celluloid and popcorn. If only there was a way to regain the time spent watching this worthless drivel. Any fool who believes there is any merit to this movie is severely deluded and quite possibly entirely demented.
Tima’sworld
22/11/2022 16:05
I saw that Metacritic gave it a much higher score and I really like Chris O'Dowd, but I found this film pretentious and embarrassingly disconnected from reality. Drippingly self-indulgent. My wife and I gave it up after 20 minutes. I would not want to know these characters.
Christine Chirombo
22/11/2022 16:05
Love After Love should continue the prepositional phrase forever because the major players in this finely wrought drama are forever looking for love or grieving about it. Matriarch Suzanne (Andie MacDowell) loses her husband and wanders around her two sons almost in a fog of grief but maybe more in puzzlement about how they are working out their fates without her influence.
They are flawed adults, like womanizing son, Nicholas (Chris O'Dowd), who has a conflicted intimacy with his mother but more with himself as he wanders among showing the greatest puppy eyes in cinema. He is an emblem of the players who never seem at peace with their current or future partners.
This episodic, fragmented story, whose jumping back and forth in time is occasionally disorienting, in its unsympathetic way, reveals the puzzle-like lives of sentient beings who witness death, go through its mourning rituals, and search for love, carnal and otherwise, in, it would seem, a hedge against oblivion.
Co-writer/director Russell Harbaugh, in a promising debut, navigates smoothly in rough affective waters, saving the best scenes by interspersing them among some fairly quotidian events that play naturally to the death motif. When alcoholic son, Chris (James Adomian), does a standup about the difficulty of Jesus competing with his Father, the metaphor is not lost but not heavy-handed either. Both sons are struggling to compete with dad and themselves.
Love After Love is a satisfying drama about all of us in families we know have dysfunctional working parts but who are on the greatest quest of all for love after love, after love, after love, forever.
Andy_
22/11/2022 16:05
Two minor quibbles: Why do people in these kinds of character study films always have glamorous jobs? And the sheer number of sex scenes detracts from the film. Most people Andie MacDowell's age don't look anything like Andie MacDowell. Otherwise, well done.
THECUTEABIOLA
22/11/2022 16:05
I have seen enough films at this point to know while watching it that this was one of the first films Russell Harbaugh directed. I knew this because first, there were several instances in which scenes interrupted other scenes without rhyme or reason. This implies that several scenes were, in my opinion, cut short. There were also times when the camera lingered too long on a subject, e.g., Andie McDowell. Related to this was the omission of what probably should have been included, specifically, the consequences of every time Chris O'Dowd's character, Nicholas, cheated on his then lover. In both cases, he just moved along, and whatever consequence there was, was minimal, and the film just progressed to his next involvement.
Then, there is the story line. I kept seeing an elephant in the room that no one was talking about and that was the Oedipal thing going on between Andie M. and Chris O'Dowd, as mother and son. Perhaps another film will grow out of this subject that was glaringly there and ignored. It almost felt as if the writer/director couldn't decide what should be the main story line, the emotional aftermath of the death of a family's husband/father, or the Oedipal relationship between the mother and son of that family which was highlighted once the father died.
Overall, as someone who can never watch too many "relationship movies", I am glad I saw Love After Love and look forward to Harbaugh's next.
Stroline Mère Suprêm
22/11/2022 16:05
The Director and the film editor should consider alternative careers. Kudos to Andie McDowell for putting herself out there as a gorgeous, magnificant mature woman. A better vehicle for her talents would have been appreciated. No theme, no character development. Writing was insipid. There wasn't one character for whom you could feel connected with even suspending disbelief.. Two hours wasted.