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IMDbPro

Win Win

  • 2011
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 46 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
55.945
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Paul Giamatti and Alex Shaffer in Win Win (2011)
In order to support his family, attorney Mike Flaherty (Giamatti) moonlights as a high school wrestling coach and assumes the guardianship on an elderly client (albeit not in the most honest fashion). Flaherty's fortunes begin to shine when the man's runaway grandson materializes, until the boy's mother appears, fresh from rehab, flat broke, and looking for an opportunity.
trailer wiedergeben2:26
9 Videos
53 Fotos
ErwachsenwerdenJuristisches DramaDramaKomödieSport

Die Schikane eines kämpfenden Anwalts und freiwilligen Ringkampftrainers kommt zurück und verfolgt ihn, als der jugendliche Enkel des Mandanten, den er aufs Kreuz gelegt hat, in sein Leben t... Alles lesenDie Schikane eines kämpfenden Anwalts und freiwilligen Ringkampftrainers kommt zurück und verfolgt ihn, als der jugendliche Enkel des Mandanten, den er aufs Kreuz gelegt hat, in sein Leben tritt.Die Schikane eines kämpfenden Anwalts und freiwilligen Ringkampftrainers kommt zurück und verfolgt ihn, als der jugendliche Enkel des Mandanten, den er aufs Kreuz gelegt hat, in sein Leben tritt.

  • Regie
    • Tom McCarthy
  • Drehbuch
    • Tom McCarthy
    • Joe Tiboni
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Paul Giamatti
    • Amy Ryan
    • Jeffrey Tambor
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    55.945
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Tom McCarthy
    • Drehbuch
      • Tom McCarthy
      • Joe Tiboni
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Paul Giamatti
      • Amy Ryan
      • Jeffrey Tambor
    • 125Benutzerrezensionen
    • 228Kritische Rezensionen
    • 75Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 5 Gewinne & 22 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos9

    Win Win
    Trailer 2:26
    Win Win
    "Beat the Crap Out of Her" from Win Win
    Clip 0:43
    "Beat the Crap Out of Her" from Win Win
    "Beat the Crap Out of Her" from Win Win
    Clip 0:43
    "Beat the Crap Out of Her" from Win Win
    Win Win: Break It Up
    Clip 0:21
    Win Win: Break It Up
    Win Win: Jbj
    Clip 0:54
    Win Win: Jbj
    Win Win: Eminem
    Clip 0:49
    Win Win: Eminem
    Win Win: Beat The Crap
    Clip 0:43
    Win Win: Beat The Crap

    Fotos53

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    Topbesetzung59

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    Paul Giamatti
    Paul Giamatti
    • Mike Flaherty
    Amy Ryan
    Amy Ryan
    • Jackie Flaherty
    Jeffrey Tambor
    Jeffrey Tambor
    • Stephen Vigman
    Bobby Cannavale
    Bobby Cannavale
    • Terry Delfino
    Burt Young
    Burt Young
    • Leo Poplar
    Melanie Lynskey
    Melanie Lynskey
    • Cindy
    Alex Shaffer
    Alex Shaffer
    • Kyle
    Margo Martindale
    Margo Martindale
    • Eleanor
    David Thompson
    David Thompson
    • Stemler
    Mike Diliello
    • Jimmy Reed
    Nina Arianda
    Nina Arianda
    • Shelly
    Marcia Haufrecht
    Marcia Haufrecht
    • Gina Flaherty
    Sharon Wilkins
    Sharon Wilkins
    • Judge Lee
    Clare Foley
    Clare Foley
    • Abby
    Penelope Kindred
    • Stella
    Sophie Kindred
    • Stella
    Tim Ransom
    Tim Ransom
    • Stuart Thatcher
    Nicholas Somers
    • BHS Coach
    • Regie
      • Tom McCarthy
    • Drehbuch
      • Tom McCarthy
      • Joe Tiboni
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen125

    7,155.9K
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    8Jazzist-H-Crisp

    Intriguing dilemmas and a splash of humour

    The story-line of Win Win brings difficult and realistic moral issues before us, which engage our interest and challenge our sympathies. But the film is not a ponderous work of moral theory, fortunately. Instead, it has many humorous moments which keep the tone quite light, even as the film raises some darker problems.

    The first dilemma concerns the subterfuge that lawyer Mike Flaherty (Paul Giametti) employs to win the maintenance award for looking after his elderly client Leo who suffers from Alzheimers disease. The dilemma is not so much his (he needs the money too badly and he has a family to provide for), as ours - should we sympathise or not? Mike is a lawyer, yet he deceives the court and thus breaks the law. Yet, at the same time, Leo does not really lose out because the home that Mike puts him in is very comfortable. In a way, Mike's deceit is a win-win solution that solves Mike's financial problems and also provides proper care for Leo. But surely deceit cannot be condoned? Or can it? While we are still dealing with that issue, an entirely different one looms up and takes over the story. Leo's grand-son arrives, looking for his grand-father, Leo, who is now in the care home. Not only does this plot development add a lot of tension (because Mike's deceit is in danger of being exposed), it also adds further complications on the moral front. The first is, should Mike tell Kyle the truth, or is it better to try and help Kyle personally while leaving him in the dark? Should we really expect Mike to confess, when the result will be disastrous for so many people and achieve very little, apart from establishing the truth about Leo's transfer to the care home? Once again, we are just beginning to settle one problem when another arrives to add further complications, this time in the shape of Kyle's mother, Leo's daughter, who has never shown any interest in her father, but now shows a mercenary interest in his state of dependency.

    I really enjoyed this film. There is a lightness in the telling of the story, which makes the whole experience a pleasure, but it is a story with some difficult issues to set before us, issues such as the care of the elderly and the rights of birth-parents over foster-parents, which give us food for thought. Above all, however, the film is very well acted and the characters are brought to life very effectively, persuading us of the reality of the issues which it raises, but also coaxing us to temper our judgment of our fellow human beings. The film reminds us that life is rarely as clear-cut as our stern guilty-or-innocent judgments would require.
    8dfranzen70

    Terrific sleeper

    Win Win is a terrific multigenre sleeper. It's funny, even hilarious; it has mystery and action; and it features brilliant performances by the always-reliable Paul Giamatti and Amy Ryan. It's also not a movie that wallows in treacly messages, and it's not a movie that uses sports as a crutch for "finding one's inner strength." In short, it's a wonderful, top-notch movie.

    Giamatti plays Mike Flaherty, a small-time lawyer who's running low on cash. He moonlights as coach of the local high-school team, which is, to put it bluntly, terrible. In a burst of fiscal sanity, Mike offers to become legal guardian for Leo, one of his clients (played by the crusty Burt Young), who's just been declared legally incapacitated. Why? Because as his guardian, Mike gets $1500 a month. But since he wants to avoid the extra hassle of actually taking care of Leo, he puts him in a nice home. Seriously, it's a nice home, with nice people and a big flat-screen TV.

    At this point, the movie wants us on Mike's side – sort of. He needs the cash, and he doesn't really want to tell his wife Jackie (Ryan) that they're running low, not with two young daughters to care for as well. Plus he's coach of a terrible team and is just swimming in stress. Swimming in it. So much so that while jogging to work off the stress, he suffers a panic attack.

    Just when Mike thinks some of his problems have been solved, teenage Kyle (Alex Shaffer) walks into his life. Kyle, it turns out, his Leo's grandson, and they've never met. Kyle's been sent by his mom to visit Leo. At first, this complicates things – especially when Kyle seems awfully reluctant to go back home to Ohio – but then Mike's remaining big problem is solved. It turns out the kid is a gifted wrestler. Who'd have thought that? He looks scrawny, but in practices Kyle shows he has the mettle. And thus things are riding well for Mike.

    But this would be a truly dull (if inspirational) movie if things continued to ride well. One thing we learn early on is that Mike intentionally misled the judge in Leo's case, giving the impression that he would be actively taking care of Leo. But things really get going when Kyle's druggie mom (Melanie Lynskey) shows up to bring her boy back – and to take over as Leo's guardian.

    Too often, Giamatti has played real sad-sack characters, guys who just can't seem to catch a break, guys who suffer at the hands of fickle fate. Not so here. Mike isn't exactly a conniving mastermind, but he's not an idiot, either, and he deals with each situation with logic and reason, even as they spiral further out of his control. It's a typically masterful Giamatti performance, and for once he's not a total loser who's in over his head. He's even a half-decent coach who simply has a lackluster team to work with.

    Giamatti's not alone, though. I really got a kick out of Amy Ryan's performance as his somewhat-exasperated spouse Jackie, who's not terribly fond of suddenly having a teenage boy around at first. A few years back, Ryan turned in an Oscar-nominated performance as a native Bostonian in Gone Baby Gone. Ryan had a thick, believable Boston accent then. Here, she's playing a New Jersey native, but at no point does she go overboard with the Jersey Shore dialect. That's what good actresses can do – they can dial it back when they have to and show a little nuance.

    Win Win is not a stand-up-and-cheer movie, although the audience at the screening I attended applauded when it was over. It's not a crime drama, and it doesn't really have a lot of twists to its plot. What makes it work are all of the truly sincere, dead-on performances: by Giamatti, Ryan, Shaffer, Lynskey, Bobby Cannavale, and even Jeffrey Tambor as one of Mike's wrestling assistant coaches. Not a sour note in the bunch, everyone at the top of his or her game.

    This might have fared well, critically, if it were released during awards season. It sort of reminded me of last year's Greenburg, starring Ben Stiller, only funnier and sweeter. Win Win is a charming, quiet movie that reminds us that, as the Grateful Dead once told us, once in a while you can get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right.
    8napierslogs

    Great characters looking for something in life and "Win Win" just might be that something

    As in Thomas McCarthy's first film, "The Station Agent", there is an air of loneliness to the characters in "Win Win" but also with an ability to be kind and with a whole lot of humour permeating throughout. Mike (Paul Giamatti) is approaching a mid-life crisis; the monotony of daily life and money troubles colliding. But this is a well written film and it doesn't look or feel like a mid-life crisis. Just as we get to know the characters exceedingly well (despite the short air time for some - Bobby Cannavale's Terry), a plot is introduced. Mike starts acting like a sleazy lawyer just to make some easy money, even though he's anything but a sleazy lawyer. Because he's a good guy, realities quickly catch up, and he starts taking responsibility for a troubled kid. Mostly trying to assuage his guilt of wrong-doing, but this kid happens to be a wrestling phenom and Mike is a struggling high school wrestling coach. This film could easily turn into an underdog sports story, but as I said before, this is a well written film and it doesn't look or feel like an underdog sports story. I found "Win Win" to be a great mix of character study, a mid-life crisis, and an underdog sports story all rolled into something that isn't any of the above. It's a light, funny, enjoyable slice of life that could provide a few lessons on morality but stops itself before it becomes condescending.
    9zkonedog

    A Movie For Our Times

    Many films (for better or worse) portray an idealized form of life/drama to combat the current economic malaise. "Win Win" is not that kind of film; instead choosing to revel in the struggles of day-to-day life and work through them.

    For a basic plot summary, "Win Win" sees Mike Flaherty (Paul Giamatti) struggling to make a living for himself and his family. His law practice is hemorrhaging funds, the bills are piling up at home, and his health is even failing due to the anxiety. After becoming personally involved with a client (Burt Young), Mike "inherits" a son (Alex Shaffer) who provides a spark for his high school wrestling team and lifts his spirits. That is, of course, until life intercedes once again.

    In better times, this might be the kind of movie that people would stay away from due to the fact that is is so down-to-earth in its portrayal of life's struggles. In tough times, though, "Win Win" really resonates on a personal level. The struggles of life are not black-and-white, but full of shades of grey and ambiguity.

    Also, while the film is well-acted as a general rule, Giamatti's performance is especially moving. Giammatti is one of the great character actors of our time and never fails to shine on the big screen. There's no one who can match his style of acting in terms of combining over-the-top physical/verbal acting with dramatic intensity.

    About the only thing that prevents this movie from being a true classic is that the climax doesn't necessarily live up to the build-up. Don't worry, though, as the rich characters and believable circumstances are more than enough to provide compelling drama and entertainment.
    JohnDeSando

    A Winner

    I enjoy Royal Tenenbaums, Juno, and Little Miss Sunshine because they're about eccentric, witty people whose foibles are made less than tragic, their dialogue hypnotizes, and their personas seduce. Then comes Win Win, not as ingenious or innovative as those films but a winner in its own right because it embellishes little while it stays real and lovingly humane.

    A little like my family and other interesting neighbors, Win Win has love to spare. Mike (Paul Giamatti) has a failing law practice, moonlights as a high school wrestling coach, and now becomes custodian of elderly Leo Poplar (Burt Young) because Mike needs the $1500 a month. Soon complication arrives with bleached blond Kyle (Alex Schaffer), Leo's grandson, who wants to live with Leo.

    Mike is thus faced with more complications than he bargained for in the caretaker role, yet a bit of light shines through as he deals with the taciturn Kyle, who happens to be an excellent wrestler. Mike's relationship with his wife, Jackie (Amy Ryan), is rich with respect between both and patience on her part as she helps Mike through his ethical challenge and his guidance of Kyle.

    Nothing comes easy in this dramedy, as it doesn't for most of us, but the beauty of this film is that it slowly works out all the kinks of life in a slowly distributed narrative with triumphs and setbacks that seem to come naturally. Because the central characters are loving and largely benign, the film has an easy, unforced quality.

    Terry (Bobby Cannavale) is especially likable as Mike's old wrestling buddy, recently split from his wife, and full of energy to channel as assistant coach helping with their new wrestling star. Cannavale brings an easy charm to the film; he's an enjoyable foil for the schlubby, depressive Giammatti.

    Although a few swear words, mostly "f bombs," are dotted in the dialogue, it is essentially a family where the characters live to love.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Alex Shaffer was indeed the New Jersey state high school wrestling champion the year before the film was made. However, he had to quit the sport due to a back injury.
    • Patzer
      When the team is on the bus heading to a match, they are going from their school in NJ to another school in NJ. However, the shot of the road they are driving down is in Rockville Centre, Long Island, NY (one of the admitted locations where the movie was filmed). In traveling from one school in NJ to another school in NJ, there would be absolutely no reason to pass through LI.
    • Zitate

      Mike Flaherty: [to the wrestling team] Now, did you all see what Kyle did the other day? He exploded up, right? Kyle, show the guys what you did.

      Kyle: It's kind of my own thing.

      Mike Flaherty: Well, can you share it with us?

      Kyle: But it's not even a move or anything.

      Mike Flaherty: It's okay.

      Kyle: All right. Well, I just tell myself that the guy on top's tryin' to take my head and shove it under water and kill me, and if I don't wanna die on bottom, I have to do whatever the fuck it takes to get out.

      Stephen Vigman: [breaking a stunned silence] Okay. So the move is "Whatever the fuck it takes." Let's go. Let's work on it.

      Terry Delfino: [chiming in forcefully as if knowledgeable] WHATEVER THE FUCK IT TAKES! LET'S GO, GENTLEMEN. UP!

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Maltin on Movies: Battle: Los Angeles (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Runaway
      Written by Bryan Crouch, Joe Barlow, Drew Dockrill, Chad Richardson, Darryl Romphf and Alex Aligizakis

      Performed by Hail the Villain

      Courtesy of Roadrunner Records and Warner Music Canada

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    • How long is Win Win?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 21. Juli 2011 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Fox Searchlight (United States)
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Chiến Thắng, Chiến Thắng
    • Drehorte
      • Locust Valley, Long Island, New York, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • Everest Entertainment
      • Groundswell Productions
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 10.179.275 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 150.362 $
      • 20. März 2011
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 11.789.613 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 46 Min.(106 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby
      • SDDS
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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