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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A recipe for a crackerjack film we have here. A charming Lothario who likes his women and drink in equal, superfluous doses, battles karma after a lifetime of misadventure. Gabriel Byrne stars, as he always does. Leonard Cohen tunes play, and that is swell. End of story. Well, not quite.
After getting a dose of his own philandering medicine, professor Samuel O'Shea bellies up to the bar and is soon joined by a parade of hallucinations. Talking ones. Several surreal monstrosities, and then, his long deceased dad, whom he spends most of the film chatting with. It is a clever ploy, the old man getting advice form his very late old man, who is actually a younger version than his son. Ghosts have it pretty good it seems. Without spoiling all of life's important questions, the apparition exists as more of a sounding board for a man in search of himself.
Life, death, mortality, love, relationships, family, reality, a hockey ballet, Frankenstein's monster, it's all here. Shame that it never gets up to full speed after such a wonderful start. Even the escapades that follow, which include a trek from Montreal to lovely Ireland, a spark of fresh romance, and jealousy gunplay, seem rather bland. For so much happening on paper, it is a shame that the screen version doesn't wield more kapow! adventure, either comically, dramatically, or preferably, both. Instead of a classic dramedy, we get a bit of a, um, coma.
Not bad, but oh, what could have been.
After getting a dose of his own philandering medicine, professor Samuel O'Shea bellies up to the bar and is soon joined by a parade of hallucinations. Talking ones. Several surreal monstrosities, and then, his long deceased dad, whom he spends most of the film chatting with. It is a clever ploy, the old man getting advice form his very late old man, who is actually a younger version than his son. Ghosts have it pretty good it seems. Without spoiling all of life's important questions, the apparition exists as more of a sounding board for a man in search of himself.
Life, death, mortality, love, relationships, family, reality, a hockey ballet, Frankenstein's monster, it's all here. Shame that it never gets up to full speed after such a wonderful start. Even the escapades that follow, which include a trek from Montreal to lovely Ireland, a spark of fresh romance, and jealousy gunplay, seem rather bland. For so much happening on paper, it is a shame that the screen version doesn't wield more kapow! adventure, either comically, dramatically, or preferably, both. Instead of a classic dramedy, we get a bit of a, um, coma.
Not bad, but oh, what could have been.
- hipCRANK
10bjpauls
An excellent film which allows us to watch as a complicated man explores the meaning of life with all its nuances. Thanks to the actors and all who made this film.
The story is quite interesting. It is dark, but has some fantasy sequences that make you wonder what exactly is real.
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!
Greetings again from the darkness. For a film that takes its title from a 1977 Leonard Cohen album and includes (I counted seven) songs from the icon throughout the film, we can expect something other than a light-hearted rom-com. And that's before we discover that the leading character is diagnosed with a brain tumor. Writer-director Matt Bissonnette's film was well received on the festival circuit in 2021 and is now being released VOD.
Gabriel Byrne (brilliant, as usual) stars as Samuel O'Shea, a twice-divorced professor based in Montreal and spending entirely too much time with drink(s) in hand. Samuel begins experiencing hallucinations ... all too real hallucinations. Initially these include the Frankenstein monster at the pub, and a bizarre, choreographed hockey ice dance at his son's (Antoine Olivier Pilon) game. From there, the visions get even stranger - often including lip-synching to a Leonard Cohen song. One exception is the recurring vision of his late father (Brian Gleeson), who died as a young adult. These interactions are 'normal' conversations, often filled with fatherly advice.
Once he receives the fatal diagnosis, Samuel does what anyone would do - he heads to the family cottage in Ireland in order to take stock of his life. He also decides to write the novel that he's always wanted to write. This stage of life (waiting to die) and writing the novel can both take many shapes. In fact, Samuel's novel is about his life, his regrets, and about whether a late-life romantic relationship can work. Charlotte Lafleur (Jessica Pare, "Mad Men") enters, having a significant impact on Samuel, his outlook, and his writing.
Younger viewers may find this one a bit difficult to connect with; however, I expect many of those over age 50 will relate very well to what Samuel goes through. The film was well received on the festival circuit in 2021 and is only now getting streaming distribution. It's not perfect, yet it's a creative view of what one experiences after being told their time is limited.
Releasing on VOD beginning September 26, 2025.
Gabriel Byrne (brilliant, as usual) stars as Samuel O'Shea, a twice-divorced professor based in Montreal and spending entirely too much time with drink(s) in hand. Samuel begins experiencing hallucinations ... all too real hallucinations. Initially these include the Frankenstein monster at the pub, and a bizarre, choreographed hockey ice dance at his son's (Antoine Olivier Pilon) game. From there, the visions get even stranger - often including lip-synching to a Leonard Cohen song. One exception is the recurring vision of his late father (Brian Gleeson), who died as a young adult. These interactions are 'normal' conversations, often filled with fatherly advice.
Once he receives the fatal diagnosis, Samuel does what anyone would do - he heads to the family cottage in Ireland in order to take stock of his life. He also decides to write the novel that he's always wanted to write. This stage of life (waiting to die) and writing the novel can both take many shapes. In fact, Samuel's novel is about his life, his regrets, and about whether a late-life romantic relationship can work. Charlotte Lafleur (Jessica Pare, "Mad Men") enters, having a significant impact on Samuel, his outlook, and his writing.
Younger viewers may find this one a bit difficult to connect with; however, I expect many of those over age 50 will relate very well to what Samuel goes through. The film was well received on the festival circuit in 2021 and is only now getting streaming distribution. It's not perfect, yet it's a creative view of what one experiences after being told their time is limited.
Releasing on VOD beginning September 26, 2025.
Did you know
- TriviaSamuel & Charlotte briefly talk about 'The Favourite Game", written by Leonard Cohen.
- How long will Death of a Ladies' Man be?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Bir Çapkının Ölümü
- Filming locations
- Montréal, Québec, Canada(multiple places, main location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $169,861
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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