IMDb RATING
5.9/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
Joshy's fiancée kills herself. 4 months later, Joshy's friends hope to cheer him up at the cabin in Ojai, CA, rented for his bachelor party weekend. Starting at the local bar, things get wil... Read allJoshy's fiancée kills herself. 4 months later, Joshy's friends hope to cheer him up at the cabin in Ojai, CA, rented for his bachelor party weekend. Starting at the local bar, things get wild.Joshy's fiancée kills herself. 4 months later, Joshy's friends hope to cheer him up at the cabin in Ojai, CA, rented for his bachelor party weekend. Starting at the local bar, things get wild.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Jess Varley
- Kylie
- (as Jessica Varley)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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The brief summary given about this story creates a different idea in ones head than what the movie actually delivers. And what the movie offers is a story of four complex guys that have come together to help Joshy get past his depression over the death of his fiancé. And as the weekend of trying to have fun evolves we learn that Joshy is just one of the guys having his own problem. Each one must deal with his own emotional self and girlfriend relationship disappointments.
Joshy must deal with the death of his girlfriend, Ari questions his marriage, Alex gets dumped by his girlfriend of ten years, Eric has commitment issues, and Greg can't seem to find a girlfriend. Each character keeps his feelings bottled up except Alex who tries to rationalize his feelings and is willing to talk to anyone who will listen.
The term 'male bonding' has been used to describe this movie but I believe it has nothing to do with bonding. Four of the five are close friends from the start and Greg was the 'guy who came along for the fun'. The story is actually about trying to avoid the issues at hand through booze, drugs, and strippers! Then near the end the five are forced by circumstance to come to terms with themselves and deal with life as best as one can.
This is a talky movie and each actor does an excellent job at being the character they were cast to be. My favorite was Ari & Jodi - they seemed so perfect together as a couple. Director/writer: Jeff Baena succeeds in creating a story of what life is like more-so in reality than what we want it to be.
Joshy must deal with the death of his girlfriend, Ari questions his marriage, Alex gets dumped by his girlfriend of ten years, Eric has commitment issues, and Greg can't seem to find a girlfriend. Each character keeps his feelings bottled up except Alex who tries to rationalize his feelings and is willing to talk to anyone who will listen.
The term 'male bonding' has been used to describe this movie but I believe it has nothing to do with bonding. Four of the five are close friends from the start and Greg was the 'guy who came along for the fun'. The story is actually about trying to avoid the issues at hand through booze, drugs, and strippers! Then near the end the five are forced by circumstance to come to terms with themselves and deal with life as best as one can.
This is a talky movie and each actor does an excellent job at being the character they were cast to be. My favorite was Ari & Jodi - they seemed so perfect together as a couple. Director/writer: Jeff Baena succeeds in creating a story of what life is like more-so in reality than what we want it to be.
Movie director Jeff Baena committed suicide earlier this month, so I decided to watch one of his movies in his memory. I'd never seen 2016's "Joshy", so I rented that. While there's nothing particularly special about the movie, it's still a decent look at some friends getting together for their planned bachelor party after the main character's fiancée commits suicide. These guys just do what they can to have fun, including some bro stuff.
I guess that it seems like the sort of movie that they just made for fun, but it's an enjoyable movie nonetheless. In addition to Thomas Middleditch, Adam Pally, Nick Kroll, Alex Ross Perry and Brett Gelman, the cast includes Jenny Slate, Lauren Graham, Aubrey Plaza (whom Baena later married) and Alison Brie.
Baena later cast Aubrey Plaza and Alison Brie as nuns in "The Little Hours" (2017).
I guess that it seems like the sort of movie that they just made for fun, but it's an enjoyable movie nonetheless. In addition to Thomas Middleditch, Adam Pally, Nick Kroll, Alex Ross Perry and Brett Gelman, the cast includes Jenny Slate, Lauren Graham, Aubrey Plaza (whom Baena later married) and Alison Brie.
Baena later cast Aubrey Plaza and Alison Brie as nuns in "The Little Hours" (2017).
I was hesitant to start this movie because of the low rating but I like all the actors and I'm very glad I did.
I was under the impression this would be nonstop laughs. I was almost immediately proven wrong.
This movie let's your guard down & then hits you with surprisingly emotional moments that don't feel cheap.
I feel like I know all the character types. It's very hard not to spoil this movie. Sure the acting isn't perfect & it can get surprisingly dark but it felt like hanging out with real people who were going thru some stuff & came out the other side.
Very touching, sometimes funny. Give it a chance.
I'm not in the demographic that this film was intended for, so perhaps I'm not the best person to rate it. The premise revolves around its main character Joshy's (Thomas Middleditch) decision to still hold his pre- planned "bachelor party", even though his fiancé committed suicide some 4 months beforehand.
As Joshy's friends and acquaintances gather at a rented home in the country, I felt, as things progressed, that some of the dark and dry humor was quite effective, especially that of the dweebish Adam (Alex Ross Perry). However, more often than not the characters and plot machinations could get rather annoying and even "go off the rails" into areas that just didn't work, in my opinion.
To note, there's plenty of drug usage on screen, lots of raw language, explicit references, and one scene of nudity.
All in all, unfortunately I thought the negatives here outweighed the positives and thus only a fair rating.
As Joshy's friends and acquaintances gather at a rented home in the country, I felt, as things progressed, that some of the dark and dry humor was quite effective, especially that of the dweebish Adam (Alex Ross Perry). However, more often than not the characters and plot machinations could get rather annoying and even "go off the rails" into areas that just didn't work, in my opinion.
To note, there's plenty of drug usage on screen, lots of raw language, explicit references, and one scene of nudity.
All in all, unfortunately I thought the negatives here outweighed the positives and thus only a fair rating.
A light movie to watch. Good jokes and comedy but not entirely , and that's why we have too much haters.
A random party weekend with a beauty message : "This is a story about friendship"
And no guys is not trying to be "The Hangover" ...
A random party weekend with a beauty message : "This is a story about friendship"
And no guys is not trying to be "The Hangover" ...
Did you know
- TriviaProduction on Joshy lasted 15 days and the majority of the film was improvised.
- GoofsIn the beginning, when they're at the bar (and fully clothed), they are freezing, but later that night, when they go out to the hot tub (and are in boxers), they aren't cold at all.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 587: Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (2016)
- SoundtracksAyrilik Olsa Bile
(Adapted from "Jesahel")
Written by Oscar Prudente, Ivano Alberto Fossati
Lyrical adaptation by Oktay Yurdatapan
Arranged by Sanar Yurdatapan
Performed by' Esmeray'
Licensed courtesy of Ossi Muzik
- How long is Joshy?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 33m(93 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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