A carousing college professor's life takes a series of unimaginable turns, and all the old stories are given a new twist, when he begins to have surreal hallucinations and learns he may not ... Read allA carousing college professor's life takes a series of unimaginable turns, and all the old stories are given a new twist, when he begins to have surreal hallucinations and learns he may not be long for this world.A carousing college professor's life takes a series of unimaginable turns, and all the old stories are given a new twist, when he begins to have surreal hallucinations and learns he may not be long for this world.
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And excellent demonstration of how a piece of art can move you by showing to you a montage of a life getting to an end. In this piece that is shown in a comedic and dramatic way. And in a form of a novel - in chapters, clear passage of time and a nice cadence pace without hurry at all.
Leonard Cohen lovers gonna love it. Please watch this!
It's quirky for sure but....it makes you ponder your own life too...how you are living it and what the end may bring also.. Gabriel Byrne..I think that's all I have to say!
College professor Samuel O'Shea (Gabriel Byrne) is a cheating ladies' man in Montreal. He catches his wife cheating in their bed and it's yet another divorce. He starts having hallucinations and is visited by his ghost dad Ben (Brian Gleeson). It's terminal brain disease. He goes to a remote house in Ireland to write his memoirs. Charlotte Lafleur (Jessica Paré) is a local store clerk.
It takes an hour for Jessica Paré to enter the picture. I expected it to be sooner and in Montreal. Then the movie splits into the two locations and I don't care about Samuel's family when he's not there. The story telling is a bit wonky. The surreal hallucinations are a little silly at times. Despite all the issues, this has Gabriel Byrne and he makes this compelling. I do like the big twist despite expecting something exactly like that. The Leonard Cohen songs are an interesting choice, but the film needs to have the guts to go full musical. They do that at the end and that's a little too late. This movie is a bit of a mess, but an interesting mess. I definitely would bring in Paré sooner and have that character be the central premise.
It takes an hour for Jessica Paré to enter the picture. I expected it to be sooner and in Montreal. Then the movie splits into the two locations and I don't care about Samuel's family when he's not there. The story telling is a bit wonky. The surreal hallucinations are a little silly at times. Despite all the issues, this has Gabriel Byrne and he makes this compelling. I do like the big twist despite expecting something exactly like that. The Leonard Cohen songs are an interesting choice, but the film needs to have the guts to go full musical. They do that at the end and that's a little too late. This movie is a bit of a mess, but an interesting mess. I definitely would bring in Paré sooner and have that character be the central premise.
Sorry, let's agree that is also a no pun intended summary line I used. We can fool ourselves, right? As humans we are able to do so - maybe to see things that are not there. And maybe you can now see what I am doing - especially if you have seen the movie. If not come back and read this again. I did not plan it, but it makes sense in the overall story arc of the character Gabriel Byrne is playing.
We try to live life a certain way. We have a moral compass - either it is fine tuned or it is not so much. Byrne takes this and elevates it - his character is not really the most likeable - but those roles are the ones that are the ones that make you want to act I assume. A challenge of sorts - a challenge that he not only accepts but is capable of mastering.
Of course he has help from other actors, the director and cinematography/editing. This is really well told - and even if you do not feel much for him, he is intriguin enough to make it worth your while ...
We try to live life a certain way. We have a moral compass - either it is fine tuned or it is not so much. Byrne takes this and elevates it - his character is not really the most likeable - but those roles are the ones that are the ones that make you want to act I assume. A challenge of sorts - a challenge that he not only accepts but is capable of mastering.
Of course he has help from other actors, the director and cinematography/editing. This is really well told - and even if you do not feel much for him, he is intriguin enough to make it worth your while ...
I believe when life come to the end, illusion comes up is very normal. This movie just someone real experience and that's life.
Did you know
- TriviaSamuel & Charlotte briefly talk about 'The Favourite Game", written by Leonard Cohen.
- How long is Death of a Ladies' Man?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
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- Also known as
- Bir Çapkının Ölümü
- Filming locations
- Montréal, Québec, Canada(multiple places, main location)
- Production companies
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Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $169,861
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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