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Squid and the Whale, The von Noah Baumbach
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Squid and the Whale, The (Original 2005; 2005. Auflage)

von Noah Baumbach

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Based on the true childhood experiences of Noah Baumbach and his brother, tells the touching story of two young boys dealing with their parents' divorce in Brooklyn in the 1980s. The patriarch of an eccentric Brooklyn family claims to once have been a great novelist, but ultimately decided to settled into a teaching job. When his wife discovers a writing talent of her own, jealousy divides the family. The two teenage sons are forced to forge new relationships with their parents. Their mom begins dating her younger son's tennis coach. Meanwhile, dad has an affair with the student his older son is pursuing.… (mehr)
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En herlig film om en skilsmissefamilie som forsøker å ordne seg som best de kan mht. omsorgen for barna og katten. Men selv om de voksne forsøker å være fornuftige, klarer de ikke å unngå at bitterhet og skuffelse går ut over barna. Barna på sin side kommer i en skvis mellom foreldrene. Humoren ligger hele tiden på lur, og filmen er ganske enkelt fornøyelig! ( )
  Rose-Marie | Jan 4, 2009 |
A fun movie for those out there in lt.com-land since both the mother and father of this satiric true tale are published authors and their oldest son is a song lyric plagiarizer. The husband, played by Jeff Daniels, is a professor whose books once meant something to a certain collegiate high brow crowd, but of late can't find a publisher for his latest tome. His wife, meanwhile, played exquisitely by Laura Linney, has just gotten her first piece published by The New Yorker. She's on the rise, he's on the descent, and so the inevitable separation ensues. I particularly loved the oldest son's mimickry of his father's literary pretensions. Take, for example, his discussion of "The Metamorphosis," with his soon-to-be girlfriend, who's just stated how much she liked it. The oldest son (I'm sorry, I forgot his name and don't feel like looking it up in imdb) replies to her, "yes, it was very Kafkaesque." His soon-to-be girlfriend shrugs and says something like, well, yeah, Franz Kafka wrote it, and the oldest son nods his head awkwardly in agreement. That the oldest son has heard his pretentious literary-minded Pop brandish about the term "Kafkaesque" in speaking about such-and-such a novel is obvious, and even more obvious is that the oldest son has no idea at all what "Kafkaesque" means. He acts out the pain of his parents separation by then performing on his school's stage a song he says he wrote called "Comfortably Numb". His parents are awed by its lyrical insight and his school performance is praised....until....some Pink Floyd aficionados at the high school ratted him out to the principal, and his parents are called into the office, and his parents, his father, in particular, must face the fact that his son is not a musical genius after all. An overrall wonderful depiction of parent writers and their overly-intellectualized marital dysfunctions, professional jealousies, adulteries (Jeff Daniels getting caught by his oldest son as he urges a grad student, played sultrily by Anna Paquin, to "take me in your mouth") and betrayals, and the rediculously divisive impact their separation has on their children as the oldest sides and lives with his dad while the younger chooses to live with his mother. Not as dark as, say, "Kramer v. Kramer," -- there's just too much humor in "The Squid and the Whale" to put it in that league -- but the conflict at times, is as acidic and beautifully blunt. If you're into movies about writers, check it out. ( )
2 abstimmen absurdeist | Jun 14, 2008 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (4 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Noah BaumbachHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Daniels, JeffCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Eisenberg, JesseCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Kline, OwenCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Linney, LauraCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Paquin, AnnaCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt

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Based on the true childhood experiences of Noah Baumbach and his brother, tells the touching story of two young boys dealing with their parents' divorce in Brooklyn in the 1980s. The patriarch of an eccentric Brooklyn family claims to once have been a great novelist, but ultimately decided to settled into a teaching job. When his wife discovers a writing talent of her own, jealousy divides the family. The two teenage sons are forced to forge new relationships with their parents. Their mom begins dating her younger son's tennis coach. Meanwhile, dad has an affair with the student his older son is pursuing.

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