Los celos de una pareja aparentemente perfecta estallan cuando la carrera profesional del marido implosiona, revelando grietas en la fachada de su vida familiar ideal.Los celos de una pareja aparentemente perfecta estallan cuando la carrera profesional del marido implosiona, revelando grietas en la fachada de su vida familiar ideal.Los celos de una pareja aparentemente perfecta estallan cuando la carrera profesional del marido implosiona, revelando grietas en la fachada de su vida familiar ideal.
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Opiniones destacadas
It's a dark comedy about marriage set from 2011 to 2025, briefly in London, England, but mainly in Mendocino, California. Theo Rose (Benedict Cumberbatch) is a frustrated, idealistic architect who wants his designs to reflect their environment. He meets Ivy (Olivia Colman), who dabbles at gourmet cooking and hankers to move to America. They impulsively marry and move to California, where in ten years Theo starts a flourishing career while Ivy raises their twin children, Hattie (Hala Finney/Delaney Quinn) and Roy (Wells Rappaport/Ollie Robinson). We also meet some friends, such as Barry (Andy Samberg) and Amy (Kate McKinnon). As things are going well, Ivy starts a small seafood restaurant with Theo's support.
Suddenly, in 2021, a major disaster turns their lives upside down--Theo loses his position and takes over raising the kids, while Ivy's restaurant suddenly becomes a major success. Their relationship deteriorates amid acerbic dialogue and conflict avoidance, culminating in an explosive climax.
I like both Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Colman as actors, and believe they deliver excellent performances in "The Roses," as the script features clever, edgy repartee between their characters, and their chemistry is outstanding. However, the secondary characters don't work as well. The Barry and Amy characters are memorable, but most others are not. The Allison Janney character has her best lines in the trailer.
Suddenly, in 2021, a major disaster turns their lives upside down--Theo loses his position and takes over raising the kids, while Ivy's restaurant suddenly becomes a major success. Their relationship deteriorates amid acerbic dialogue and conflict avoidance, culminating in an explosive climax.
I like both Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Colman as actors, and believe they deliver excellent performances in "The Roses," as the script features clever, edgy repartee between their characters, and their chemistry is outstanding. However, the secondary characters don't work as well. The Barry and Amy characters are memorable, but most others are not. The Allison Janney character has her best lines in the trailer.
I think it's really amazing to have a romantic comedy featuring two of the UK's national treasures Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Coleman in the theatres now, especially with all the nastiness going on the world.
This reimagining of the 1989 dark comedy featuring Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas, shows what happens when a couple favour work-like ambitions rather than working on communicating with one another. It is genuinely hilarious, sweet and tragic all at the same time.
I won't give away the ending, but while it makes some changes to how the 1989 version ended, it also doesn't take away its cautionary tale aspect. It is also hugely critical of the material wealth that people accumulate when they become successful with their jobs.
The two leads have great chemistry and work excellently together. The film also has an early 2000s vibe, which reminded me of Roach's earlier films such as Meet The Parents or Analyse This. Definitely worth a rewatch!
This reimagining of the 1989 dark comedy featuring Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas, shows what happens when a couple favour work-like ambitions rather than working on communicating with one another. It is genuinely hilarious, sweet and tragic all at the same time.
I won't give away the ending, but while it makes some changes to how the 1989 version ended, it also doesn't take away its cautionary tale aspect. It is also hugely critical of the material wealth that people accumulate when they become successful with their jobs.
The two leads have great chemistry and work excellently together. The film also has an early 2000s vibe, which reminded me of Roach's earlier films such as Meet The Parents or Analyse This. Definitely worth a rewatch!
Less a scabrous 'my parents in the eighties' affair like the original "War of The Roses" than a continuous mild volley of P. G. Wodehouse-level insults and backhands, Coleman and Cumberbatch are a delight as marrieds (though looking more like elder sister and flummoxed younger brother) whose equanimity topples when Benedict's architectural career goes the way of Gotham Hospital in "The Dark Knight." Andy Samberg, Alison Janney and Kate McKinnon sit back and provide relaxed support when necessary but mostly let these old pros stretch out and do their stuff. What a great throwback pairing and bouquet of talent! Hope they work together again!
I don't know that I've ever seen a genuinely funny, adult movie with comedy that felt equally British and American.
I laughed. Out loud. In the theater.
It was a little raunchy at times but it didn't rely on raunchiness, which was refreshing. There were real heartbreaking, award-caliber moments between a couple that had lost their way, but it was still CLEARLY a comedy.
I was expecting more of a climax after all the buildup but I appreciate the ending.
I also wish Allison Janney had a bigger part, just because I really like her.
Kate McKinnon did everything right and she needs to be in more movies like this that can accommodate her style of comedy.
But the drivers were 2 brilliant actors, Colman and Cumberbatch, whose supporting cast members had just the right amount of screen time so that we had other interests, but the story remained on them. Both did a very good job of portraying how 2 deeply flawed people over 40 navigate a rocky marriage...actually "rocky" may be underselling it a bit based solely on the last 20ish minutes. You decide.
Imagine this movie as the next step for Olivia Colman's character after The Bear and it becomes even more entertaining.
I laughed. Out loud. In the theater.
It was a little raunchy at times but it didn't rely on raunchiness, which was refreshing. There were real heartbreaking, award-caliber moments between a couple that had lost their way, but it was still CLEARLY a comedy.
I was expecting more of a climax after all the buildup but I appreciate the ending.
I also wish Allison Janney had a bigger part, just because I really like her.
Kate McKinnon did everything right and she needs to be in more movies like this that can accommodate her style of comedy.
But the drivers were 2 brilliant actors, Colman and Cumberbatch, whose supporting cast members had just the right amount of screen time so that we had other interests, but the story remained on them. Both did a very good job of portraying how 2 deeply flawed people over 40 navigate a rocky marriage...actually "rocky" may be underselling it a bit based solely on the last 20ish minutes. You decide.
Imagine this movie as the next step for Olivia Colman's character after The Bear and it becomes even more entertaining.
Really Funny
Theo and Ivy have been married for 10 years, they have 2 kids and live in California. Ivy is a phenomenal chef and starts to work part time while minding the kids and Theo is an architect building a landmark in Cali. As disaster hits and Theo must stay home, it aligns with Ivy and her career flourishing, this is when the hatred starts and it all goes down hill.
The movie is really good, it's been a while where I laughed a lot in the cinema. The movie is a comedy and actually feels like one.
There is a very strong supporting cast, Andy Samberg being great along with Ncuti Gatwa. Kate McKinnon is in this but Jesus her character drove me mad.
The chemistry between Cumberbatch and Colman is top class, a believable couple, believable arguing and story line.
I laughed, I was moved at times, and I smiled a lot, definitely worth watching in cinemas or at home, 8/10.
Theo and Ivy have been married for 10 years, they have 2 kids and live in California. Ivy is a phenomenal chef and starts to work part time while minding the kids and Theo is an architect building a landmark in Cali. As disaster hits and Theo must stay home, it aligns with Ivy and her career flourishing, this is when the hatred starts and it all goes down hill.
The movie is really good, it's been a while where I laughed a lot in the cinema. The movie is a comedy and actually feels like one.
There is a very strong supporting cast, Andy Samberg being great along with Ncuti Gatwa. Kate McKinnon is in this but Jesus her character drove me mad.
The chemistry between Cumberbatch and Colman is top class, a believable couple, believable arguing and story line.
I laughed, I was moved at times, and I smiled a lot, definitely worth watching in cinemas or at home, 8/10.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaWhen deciding what Theo and Ivy's careers would be, writer Tony McNamara looked for "things I knew about, and I wanted two jobs that were manifested visually. I wanted [Theo] to build something we could see and for her to build something that was tactile." McNamara also chose Ivy's career as a chef because he's a self-described foodie who previously worked in restaurants.
- ErroresWhen the Roses are seeing their kids off at the airport, they're doing so at the gate, something not permitted for non-passengers since 9/11.
- ConexionesVersion of La guerra de los Roses (1989)
- Bandas sonorasHappy Together
performed by Susanna Hoffs and Rufus Wainwright
written by Garry Bonner and Alan Gordon
courtesy of: Bank Robber Music, LLC
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Roses
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 9,064,370
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 6,265,264
- 31 ago 2025
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 19,380,211
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 45min(105 min)
- Color
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