When her only daughter goes off to university, an empty-nest mother gets stuck taking care of her daughter's heartbroken ex-boyfriend, whom she can't stand.When her only daughter goes off to university, an empty-nest mother gets stuck taking care of her daughter's heartbroken ex-boyfriend, whom she can't stand.When her only daughter goes off to university, an empty-nest mother gets stuck taking care of her daughter's heartbroken ex-boyfriend, whom she can't stand.
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Ordena Stephens
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performed by Frazey Ford"
Featured review
Greetings again from the darkness. Empty nest syndrome has always fascinated me. As parents, we strive to build independence in our kids so that they can go out in the world and fend for themselves (better described as not moving back home or remaining on the family 'payroll'). And then there are parents like Susan in this excellent and entertaining new film from co-writers and co-directors Dane Clark and Linsey Stewart (partners, spouses, and collaborators).
We first see Susan (Michaela Watkins) as she arrives home and finds her husband and a woman canoodling in the backyard swimming pool. The story then jumps ahead five years. Susan is divorced and her daughter Brooke (Sara Waisglass, TAINTED, 2020) is graduating from high school, with a plan to live at home and attend a local college. Susan is a hovering parent, seemingly involved in all aspects of Brooke's life - even questioning what her daughter sees in goofy and free-spirited Gage (Charlie Gillespie, TOTALLY KILLER, 2023), the boyfriend who couldn't manage to graduate on time.
Susan is exasperated ... or maybe just beaten down ... with her life. She works a dead-end job, is in perimenopause, has no love life of her own, can't believe her overachieving daughter is with this 'loser', and seems to have lost any portion of her own self while being a mother. Things go from bad to worse for her when her ex-husband and his new wife (Sandy Jobin-Bevans, Sorika Wolf) spill the beans on big news about Brooke. It's news that shocks Susan - mostly because she was the last to know. Now for all of this to work, the extraordinary talents of Michaela Watkins (YOU HURT MY FEELINGS, 2023; PAINT, 2023) carry these scenes. She flashes the greatest forlorn face in cinema. Is this kinda funny or is the pain too deep? Well, it's both.
The film really takes off from there. Circumstances are such that Susan and Gage are forced to spend significant time together, and what follows is an example of how humanity and emotions and personality can blend to form surprising bonds. The on-screen chemistry between Watkins and Gillespie is a thing of beauty. It's not romantic chemistry, but rather two lonely souls from different generations learning and evolving thanks to each other. Once we meet Gage's dad (Aaron Ashmore), much is understood as to why Gage thrives from Susan's caring approach.
This script is beautifully written, and the acting is superb. The cast excels in playing the scenarios as real people would. The dialogue is grounded, yet sometimes it stings, while at other times it evokes laughter. When Gage tells Susan, "We both got left by the same person", their bond is solidified - even moreso than after the 'cuddle party'. The cherry on top here is Gage performing Roxette's classic hit, "It Must Have Been Love". The film was well received at festivals last year, and I expect it will find an appreciative audience this year.
Opens in theaters on February 7, 2024.
We first see Susan (Michaela Watkins) as she arrives home and finds her husband and a woman canoodling in the backyard swimming pool. The story then jumps ahead five years. Susan is divorced and her daughter Brooke (Sara Waisglass, TAINTED, 2020) is graduating from high school, with a plan to live at home and attend a local college. Susan is a hovering parent, seemingly involved in all aspects of Brooke's life - even questioning what her daughter sees in goofy and free-spirited Gage (Charlie Gillespie, TOTALLY KILLER, 2023), the boyfriend who couldn't manage to graduate on time.
Susan is exasperated ... or maybe just beaten down ... with her life. She works a dead-end job, is in perimenopause, has no love life of her own, can't believe her overachieving daughter is with this 'loser', and seems to have lost any portion of her own self while being a mother. Things go from bad to worse for her when her ex-husband and his new wife (Sandy Jobin-Bevans, Sorika Wolf) spill the beans on big news about Brooke. It's news that shocks Susan - mostly because she was the last to know. Now for all of this to work, the extraordinary talents of Michaela Watkins (YOU HURT MY FEELINGS, 2023; PAINT, 2023) carry these scenes. She flashes the greatest forlorn face in cinema. Is this kinda funny or is the pain too deep? Well, it's both.
The film really takes off from there. Circumstances are such that Susan and Gage are forced to spend significant time together, and what follows is an example of how humanity and emotions and personality can blend to form surprising bonds. The on-screen chemistry between Watkins and Gillespie is a thing of beauty. It's not romantic chemistry, but rather two lonely souls from different generations learning and evolving thanks to each other. Once we meet Gage's dad (Aaron Ashmore), much is understood as to why Gage thrives from Susan's caring approach.
This script is beautifully written, and the acting is superb. The cast excels in playing the scenarios as real people would. The dialogue is grounded, yet sometimes it stings, while at other times it evokes laughter. When Gage tells Susan, "We both got left by the same person", their bond is solidified - even moreso than after the 'cuddle party'. The cherry on top here is Gage performing Roxette's classic hit, "It Must Have Been Love". The film was well received at festivals last year, and I expect it will find an appreciative audience this year.
Opens in theaters on February 7, 2024.
- ferguson-6
- Feb 5, 2025
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- Runtime1 hour 33 minutes
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