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Krisha

  • 2015
  • R
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Krisha (2015)
Trailer for Krisha
Play trailer2:11
7 Videos
14 Photos
Psychological DramaDrama

Krisha returns for Thanksgiving dinner after ten years away from her family, but past demons threaten to ruin the festivities.Krisha returns for Thanksgiving dinner after ten years away from her family, but past demons threaten to ruin the festivities.Krisha returns for Thanksgiving dinner after ten years away from her family, but past demons threaten to ruin the festivities.

  • Director
    • Trey Edward Shults
  • Writer
    • Trey Edward Shults
  • Stars
    • Krisha Fairchild
    • Alex Dobrenko
    • Robyn Fairchild
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Trey Edward Shults
    • Writer
      • Trey Edward Shults
    • Stars
      • Krisha Fairchild
      • Alex Dobrenko
      • Robyn Fairchild
    • 61User reviews
    • 88Critic reviews
    • 86Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 17 wins & 28 nominations total

    Videos7

    Krisha
    Trailer 2:11
    Krisha
    Krisha
    Trailer 2:14
    Krisha
    Krisha
    Trailer 2:14
    Krisha
    Krisha Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Krisha Official Trailer
    The Perfect Movies to Watch This Thanksgiving
    Clip 3:51
    The Perfect Movies to Watch This Thanksgiving
    Krisha: 'Catch Up'
    Clip 1:51
    Krisha: 'Catch Up'
    Grandma
    Clip 2:14
    Grandma

    Photos13

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    + 8
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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Krisha Fairchild
    Krisha Fairchild
    • Krisha
    Alex Dobrenko
    • Alex
    Robyn Fairchild
    • Robyn
    Chris Doubek
    Chris Doubek
    • Dr. Becker
    Victoria Fairchild
    • Vicki
    Bryan Casserly
    Bryan Casserly
    • Logan
    Chase Joliet
    Chase Joliet
    • Chase
    Atheena Frizzell
    • Atheena
    Augustine Frizzell
    Augustine Frizzell
    • Augustine
    Olivia Grace Applegate
    Olivia Grace Applegate
    • Olivia
    Rose Nelson
    • Baby Rose
    Bill Wise
    • Doyle
    Trey Edward Shults
    Trey Edward Shults
    • Trey
    Billie Fairchild
    • Grandma
    • Director
      • Trey Edward Shults
    • Writer
      • Trey Edward Shults
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews61

    7.110.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8paul-allaer

    Heavy duty family drama will stay with you

    "Krisha" brings the story of the title character. As the movie opens, we see Krishna, a woman in her 60s, arriving with her suitcase at a house in suburban Texas. Turns out to be her sister Robyn's house, and the entire family is gathering for Thanksgiving, and also to celebrate the birth of a baby to Robyn's daughter. It is clear that this is Krisha's first time seeing most of them in a long time, and that during that absence she deal with personal issues. At this point we're maybe 10 minutes into the movie, but to tell you more would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: this movie is a labor of love for Trey Edward Shults, who directed, wrote, edited and stars in the movie. Not to mention that this movie was made on less than a shoestring (primary funding came from a small Kickstarter campaign). In the first half of the movie, we witness how this family is enjoying their time together, even if it is straining for Krisha. But the second half of the movie truly delivers. One key scene after another unfolds, and will leave you nailed to your seat. There are a number of key performances, none more so than Krisha Faichild in the title role (most other characters also use their real life names in the movie). Check out the scene where she is reunited with her mentally frail mother, who looks to be in her 90s. Just wow. Robyn Fairchild as Krisha's sister is equally excellent. There is an interesting score courtesy of (for me unknown) Brian McOmber.

    This movie made quite a splash at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. No idea why it's taken over a year for this to finally get a release in theaters, but better late than not. "Krisha" opened this weekend at my local art-house theater here in Cincinnati, and I couldn't wait to see it. The early evening screening where I saw this at was attended okay but not great. That is a darn shame. This is a top notch if heavy duty family drama which deserves a larger audience. If you have a chance to see this, be it in the theater, on VOD or eventually on DVD/Blu-ray, by all means do not miss it! "Krisha" is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
    Red_Identity

    Unsettling and brutal, but essential

    I don't know where that "comedy" label on IMDb comes from. I don't think it functions even as a black comedy. Absolutely heavy and quite dark, but fabulously written, directed, and acted. There are many films that deal with this sort of premise (even Rachel Getting Married comes to mind) but this really took it to another level. Completely immersive, watching it all unravel just hurts to watch. Not an easy viewing by any means and definitely one that will divide audiences completely (even on this board, I can see many people hating it). I loved it though, easily one of the best of the year so far. Krisha Fairchild should absolutely be in contention for end-of-the- year awards, and Trey Edward Shults shows a lot of talent.
    9rick-42282

    Too real for most IMDb film reviewers

    Like "La Cienaga", this movie has a veracity and intimacy that will freak out most self- appointed film critics (and I'm not one). If you can't handle domestic pain, tension, and heartbreak then don't watch it. As a big fan of Dostoyevsky I found it riveting and powerful. After viewing I immediately sought out the back story and wasn't surprised to learn the cast/family are actual family members. I don't think a filmmaker could achieve what Shults does with an all-actor cast. It matters not a whit to me that he used family members or that you can foresee an inevitable train wreck in the making toward the end of Act 2. A great film, and the audio effects are superb, especially in the kitchen scene and the use of a Nina Simone track to score Krisha's high flying cookoff.
    9quinimdb

    Krisha

    The first shot of "Krisha" is a slow zoom into the titular characters face, with ominous, rising music in the background. The preceding scenes (and the fantastic introductory long take) show that Krisha is coming home to family that she hasn't seen in a while on Thanksgiving day, and has good intentions for her visit. But this mood of uncertainty established in the opening shot rises throughout the movie. Even though Krisha is simply participating in usual small talk towards the beginning of the film, the unpredictable soundtrack, frantic movement of the camera, and the performances of the characters suggest Krisha isn't stable.

    The film is very subtle and deliberate in what it reveals to us about this family and Krisha's past. The film starts after much has already happened with her character, and many things are revealed about her throughout the film, but most are just suggested. She has problems in her past that have affected her whole family, and her sudden visit to them intends to make up for those problems.

    The camera and aspect ratios tell us a lot about the state of Krisha's character. At first the camera movements are frantic but fluid, showing Krisha is in control, but could lose it at any moment. Then the camera is shaky and the aspect ratio narrows, with two black bars at the top and bottom, showing Krisha is on the verge of breaking, relapsing into alcoholism. Then the aspect ratio boxes her in and the editing and camera movements are spastic, showing her isolation and inability to escape it.

    While the cinematography tells a lot about Krisha, the actress portraying her, Krisha Fairchild, really tells the most. Her repressed suffering is evident with this actress. This is the type of film where all of the actors make each scene feel natural and incredibly realistic. They seem like real people in a family we could know, and that's part of what makes the film so brutal.

    Krisha is a devastating, deeply emotional character study and one of the best films of 2016.
    6jtncsmistad

    "Krisha": Crushingly depressing chronicle of a family fractured.

    For reasons never made entirely evident, 60-something Krisha has willfully severed ties for several years with her family, including a now young adult son. She decides to reconnect with her kin for Thanksgiving dinner at the suburban home of her sister and her family.

    I grew up in a suburban Texas community not unlike the one which serves as the setting for the entirety of "Krisha". As such, I can almost literally sense the air, smell the scents and feel the sensibility of the space these characters inhabit. I have lived it. The memories for me are lasting. And they are abundantly good. Not so in this mostly morose and melancholy scenario.

    Veteran but still little-known actress Krisha Fairchild ("The Killing of John Lennon" representing one of a handful of somewhat recognizable credits) delivers remarkable and wrenching work here. Fairchild is exceptionally effecting as she gives us a deeply troubled profile of an irrevocably tortured soul riddled with substance abuse, self loathing, uncontrollable anger and crippling regret.

    This is a mysterious woman to be sure. Where exactly has Krisha been for all of these years in estrangement? What is it that has occupied her life during this time of indistinct purpose? Krisha reveals only vague hints and innuendo to various members of an uncomfortably skeptical family. Observing the holiday festivities and camaraderie carry on all about her, she remains remote, detached, never engaging in any of it, focusing instead almost exclusively and at her own insistence on preparing the super-sized turkey for that evening's meal.

    The very characteristics that make Fairchild's portrayal so riveting are the same traits that make this excruciatingly conflicted character so dreadfully off-putting. Because we do not come to know practically anything at all about why Krisha ever abandoned her family in the first place, we never have a frame of reference for why she would ever even choose to do this. This confounding ambiguity leaves us feeling as distant from Krisha as she is from her own flesh and blood relatives. How can we genuinely invest in and grow to care for a person about whom we know virtually nothing and who has given us no compelling reason to do so? We feel very sorry for Krisha, sure. But beyond that we are inspired to generate little if any emotion beyond pure pity.

    Technically, much of the key speech in "Krisha" was extremely difficult to make out, either as a result of it being overly hushed or garbled as characters talked over and above each other. I by and large appreciate natural dialogue as it is spoken in "real life" in most films, a dynamic that first time feature Writer and Director Trey Edward Shults was clearly striving for in his project. But when it is impossible to decipher what is being said, even after rewinding and replaying these scenes as I was able to do, the overall effect which you are efforting to achieve is unfortunately, and frustratingly, lost in translation. Moments involving Krisha and her wheelchair-bound mentally fragile mother, and what should have been a memorably moving interchange between Krisha and her long-suffering sister toward the end of the picture, are two especially conspicuous examples of these audio recording shortcomings really hurting the overall impact of the story.

    Shults's choice to employ a constant instrumental undercurrent of enormously edgy electronica for the first several minutes of "Krisha" certainly serves it's purpose of establishing an atmosphere of palpably building tension. But soon the moody music devolves into an overdone distraction, eventually becoming simply an ill-advised artistic affectation.

    This is criticism reasonably forgivable for a rookie from a personal perspective. But ideally they are lasting lessons learned in what, even with these missteps, looks to be a considerably capable career.

    This is a depressing movie. Unrelentingly so. And I know from depressing flicks, having seen my share of them over the years. However, there aren't many among this gloomy group that I would rank above "Krisha".

    In the end, nothing is clarified and nothing is resolved in "Krisha". Consequently, as an audience we are left with no appreciable degree of either resonance nor redemption. Only a sad and sour familial holiday experience. And, though granted generally not this extent, haven't we all in our own lives had our fill of at least some manner of domestic dysfunction? Watching somebody else's tumult and torture and classifying it as worse than one's own is not exactly a superlative barometer for satisfying cinematic consumption.

    I'm giving "Krisha" a charitable 6 out of 10, almost entirely, and quite candidly, because the film was shot in The Lone Star State and out of high regard for Fairchild's arresting performance.

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    Related interests

    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Billie Fairchild, who plays Grandma in the film, is actually suffering from Alzheimer's Disease, so she was not entirely aware she was acting in a film, although director Trey Edward Shults said she had a wonderful time at the "Thanksgiving."
    • Connections
      Featured in Human Nature: Creating It Comes at Night (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Just in Time
      Written by Betty Comden, Adolph Green, Jule Styne

      Courtesy of Warner Chappell Inc o/b/o Stratford Music Corp.

      Performed by Nina Simone

      Courtesy of the Estate of Nina Simone and Rich & Famous Records, Ltd.

      © 1968, courtesy of Steven Ames Brown

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 7, 2016 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Криша
    • Filming locations
      • Spring, Texas, USA
    • Production company
      • Hoody Boy Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $144,822
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,880
      • Mar 20, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $144,822
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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