Popularity: 0.8 (history)
Director: | Annie Baker |
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Writer: | Annie Baker |
Staring: |
In rural Western Massachusetts, 11-year-old Lacy spends the summer of 1991 at home, enthralled by her own imagination and the attention of her mother, Janet. As the months pass, three visitors enter their orbit, all captivated by Janet. | |
Release Date: | Jun 21, 2024 |
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Director: | Annie Baker |
Writer: | Annie Baker |
Genres: | Drama |
Keywords | massachusetts, summer, woman director, 1990s, mother daughter relationship, intimate, understated |
Production Companies | BBC Film, A24, Present Company |
Box Office |
Revenue: $727,621
Budget: $0 |
Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
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Julianne Nicholson | Janet |
Zoe Ziegler | Lacy |
Will Patton | Wayne |
Sophie Okonedo | Regina |
Elias Koteas | Avi |
Luke Bosco | Male Counselor |
June Walker Grossman | Susanna |
Abby Harri | Emily |
Edie Moon Kearns | Sequoia |
Mary Shultz | Davina |
Jeremy Louise Eaton | Performer 1 |
Raky Sastri | Performer 2 |
John Peitso | Performer 3 |
Carolyn Walker | Performer 4 |
Matthew Glassman | Performer 5 |
Mary Beth Brooker | Bonnie |
George Marshall | Contra Dance Caller |
Laura Litterer | Person at End |
Cynthia Clancy | Theatre Goer (uncredited) |
Liza Francini | Singing Camper (uncredited) |
Casey McNeal | Ice Cream Dad (uncredited) |
Julia Weston | Teen Girl at Mall (uncredited) |
Julia Weston | Teen Girl at Mall (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
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Annie Baker | Writer, Director |
Eléonore Hendricks | Casting Director |
Abby Harri | Casting Director |
Lucian Johnston | Editor |
Jessica Kelly | Casting |
Teresa Mastropierro | Production Design |
Thomas Slattery | Art Direction |
Lizzie Donelan | Costume Design |
Paul Hsu | Sound Designer |
Jeff Medeiros | Stunt Coordinator |
Marissa Haley | Makeup Department Head |
Angie Johnson | Hair Department Head |
Allison Jackson | Sound Mixer |
Danica Chipman | Set Decoration |
Kat Hess | Second Assistant Director |
Laura Klein | First Assistant Director |
Kyle Zemborain | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Ben Spaner | Steadicam Operator |
Georgia Pantazopoulos | Camera Operator |
Jake Lyon | Gaffer |
Kelly Saxon | Costume Supervisor |
Joe Rudge | Music Supervisor |
Rachael White | Key Hair Stylist |
Zelda Vyssotsky | Graphic Designer |
Justine Yeh | Art Department Coordinator |
Luisa Piña | Assistant Property Master |
Sandra Mattingly | On Set Dresser |
Jennifer Driscoll | Property Master |
Daniel Mulvaney | Second Second Assistant Director |
Lain Kienzle | Script Supervisor |
Teddy Blanks | Title Designer |
Matt Hovland | ADR Mixer |
George A. Lara | Foley Mixer |
Bill Orrico | Foley Editor |
Maya Peart | First Assistant Sound Editor |
Julia Stockton | Dialogue Editor |
Deanna Williams | Boom Operator |
Liv Swenson | Key Makeup Artist |
Ben Bornstein | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
Chenney Chen | Production Supervisor |
Ivan Lafayette | Unit Production Manager |
Jasmine Chang | Assistant Camera |
Claire Folger | Still Photographer |
David Hallas | Lighting Technician |
Maria von Hausswolff | Director of Photography |
Caneen Canning | Set Decoration Buyer |
Nicholas Schenck | Sound Editor |
Rebecca Birstock | Casting Associate |
Cheryl Wang | Music Coordinator |
Seth Ricart | Colorist |
Camille Gilbert | Assistant Editor |
James Strunk | Key Costumer |
Jeremy Baldauf | Generator Operator |
Woody Bell | Key Grip |
Eric Komar | Dolly Grip |
Paulius Kontijevas | Steadicam Operator |
Dan Mason | Additional Camera |
Sam Storm | Second Assistant Camera |
Name | Title |
---|---|
Annie Baker | Producer |
Andrew Goldman | Producer |
Ivan Lafayette | Co-Producer |
Derrick Tseng | Producer |
Rebecca Wyzan | Co-Producer |
Chelsea Barnard | Executive Producer |
Eva Yates | Executive Producer |
Rose Garnett | Executive Producer |
Michael Gottwald | Co-Producer |
Dan Janvey | Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
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2024 | 4 | 10 | 21 | 4 |
2024 | 5 | 13 | 23 | 6 |
2024 | 6 | 23 | 53 | 8 |
2024 | 7 | 17 | 27 | 8 |
2024 | 8 | 102 | 299 | 20 |
2024 | 9 | 39 | 55 | 20 |
2024 | 10 | 26 | 46 | 16 |
2024 | 11 | 20 | 80 | 9 |
2024 | 12 | 16 | 31 | 9 |
2025 | 1 | 14 | 21 | 8 |
2025 | 2 | 8 | 11 | 1 |
2025 | 3 | 3 | 11 | 1 |
2025 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
2025 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 1 |
2025 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 1 |
2025 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
2025 | 8 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
2025 | 9 | 2 | 4 | 0 |
2025 | 10 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 12 | 693 | 863 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 11 | 231 | 512 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 10 | 460 | 514 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 9 | 143 | 420 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 8 | 24 | 282 |
There’s a difference between minimalist and vacuous, and writer-director Annie Baker doesn’t seem to know the difference. The playwright’s debut feature, to put it simply, is boring, pretentious, meandering, unfocused and a big, fat waste of time. It’s so dull, in fact, that the film makes the works ... of Kelly Reichardt appear utterly fascinating. Set in 1991 in the hippie-dominated arts community of rural western Massachusetts, the film follows the story (if one could even call it that) of middle-aged acupuncturist Janet (Julianne Nicholson) as she struggles to sort out what appears to have been a wayward, meandering life. And, as this tale plays out, it faithfully sticks to that course, too, an influence that’s clearly wearing off on Janet’s equally clueless, incessantly brooding, 8-year-old daughter, Lacy (newcomer Zoe Ziegler). Along the way, the duo experiences an array of cryptic, inconsequential involvements with others who are apparently fascinated with Janet (though goodness knows why), all of whom (Will Patton, Sophie Okonedo, Elias Koteas) are just as lost and boring as Janet is. So what’s the point in all this? Who knows – and, not long into the picture, who cares? The raves that have been showered on this tedious, tiresome piece of filmmaking are a complete mystery to me, given its prevailing mundane nature and monotone performances by players who all sound like they’ve been shot up with sodium pentothal. Nicholson, in particular, comes across as so disengaged that she probably could have just as easily phoned in this performance (despite claims that this is the breakthrough role that she’s supposedly been waiting for – please, watch her in “August: Osage County” (2013) instead). What’s more, this picture probably has some of the worst sound quality I’ve ever seen in a contemporary production – so bad that I had to struggle to be able to hear what was being said (and I was sitting in the theater’s second row). And the film’s feeble attempts at trying to incorporate some kind of subtle, nuanced metaphysical undercurrent fail miserably as well, treated almost as if their inclusion was an afterthought. If you dare to consider giving this one a look, make sure you don’t watch it when you’re tired – you just might fall asleep soon after the opening credits roll, an understandable reaction, to be sure.
A story about a mom and daughter in an awkwardly semi-erotic relationship. The mom starts a relationship with a mentally ill and mentally disabled white man with a speech impediment. We never get to know why or how she hooked up with him. We know she peddles woo for a living, so she hasn't met hi ... m in some kind of caretaker/patient relationship. Perhaps it's a fetish. Perhaps it was all she could get. Well, they mow their lawn and sit around trying to say as little as possible, helped by the guy's aforementioned speech impediment. Sometimes the girl plays her Casio. They meet up with the guy's daughter from another unexplained relationship after first standing a minute by their car, then two minutes staring in silence about thirty feet away from the daughter. The two girls play. Then the ill guy gets a headache, and the mom breaks up with him. The mom and daughter then go to some kind of religious communist hippie seance thing for about half an hour, where they first appropriate what looks like maybe Indian culture, then talk about how the culture of others is evil and nihilistic and how they're better than everyone else. The mom then starts a lesbian relationship with a black woman, who's also into woo. The black lesbian lets us know that the mom is a fantastic woman, which is really helpful, because she's only been shown so far as a somewhat unstable questionable mom with terrible judgment. The black lesbian, thankfully, is pretty cool and has her shit together. She can also speak, a trait she uses on the daughter, who by the way talks like a thirty-year-old most of the time. Maybe the mom goes on Tinder for her lesbian hookups instead of driving around homeless areas when looking for a straight hookup. Then they take a bath, watch some TV, talk about themselves, and delve into teenage Weltschmertz-level pocket philosophy for about half an hour. In the end, the black lesbian agrees with the mom in the wrong way, and the mom goes into a mentally abusive tirade, possibly due to some kind of psychosis. Then the daughter eats an ice cream for about five minutes. When she comes home, one of the weirdos from the hippie commune is there and asks awkward questions for awhile. The daughter then sits on the couch for about five minutes looking at a doll, then plays piano for another five minutes, and finally looks at weirdo guy talking to black lesbian girl without sound for a long time. Weirdo guy abduct lesbian black woman in his beetle bus. At night, when mom and daughter are doing whatever it is they're up to in bed, the daughter reveals that she's a lesbian. Mom says she kinda suspected it, because the way she is as a person probably wouldn't work with a man, so it'd be easier to just be lesbian. Which of course is incredibly insensitive and disrespectful, but the daughter seems fine with it. The mom then disregards the subject and starts talking about herself, and how she's so amazing that she could make any man in the world fall in love with her. Maybe this narcissism is a biproduct of her mental health problems, but we can only guess. Her tremendously inappropriate oversharing lasts for about five minutes, and then thankfully the scene is over. In act three, creepy weirdo guy returns and shares his cringe misconceptions about cosmology and the big bang, mixed in a blender with Buddhist misunderstandings. Then the daughter and mom go for a walk and the mom shares thoughts on how she doesn't understand how other people work, in particular men. It escalates into a sort of religiously induced mental breakdown that for some reason doesn't freak out the daughter. Perhaps she's seen this sort of thing much too often and has learned over the years to disassociate and compartmentalize. The daughter then gets a headache and lies around for about twelve hundred hours. The mom now wants creepy weirdo Deepak Chopra cosmology guy's penis for some reason, and as is her apparent habit, she makes the daughter make the decision for her if it's okay to hook up with him. Just as she habitually makes it the daughter's decision when she breaks up with someone. Guess she doesn't want to carry the burden herself of her poor decisions. Much better to let her nine-year-old daughter deal with that guilt. The mom and Deepak Chopra now go for a walk for six years, two of which are spent by Deepak as he reads from a book under a tree. Mom "spaced out in the middle," as she puts it, and asks him to read it again. Which. He. Does. Literally. For two more years. Mr. Chopra then vanishes into thin air, and mom spends about a millennium sitting under a tree confused, then driving home while eating chicken in the beetle bang bus. The last ten minutes are spent watching people dance, and the daughter very very slowly cracking from the pressure of the mental abuse she's suffered at the hand of her mom. The end. Oh, and it's an A24 production, so audio is mono and it's filmed in AnusVision, left to fade in the sun, the blacks crushed, the brights crushed, the brightness turned down to 20% so you can't see what's going on, contrast to 10% so it's as dull as the colors are faded, the black level then lifted to 5% so dark scenes are gray scenes, then dragged through a latrine for grittiness and developed and scanned by a blind drunkard. I really like many A24 films. But this narcissistic, pretentious, navel-gazing, frankly unintelligent, woke, forced, pathetically and clumsily scaffolded, boring and predictable garbage is NOT it. Damn, what a chore to get through. Not a single likeable character. The daughter comes close, but is so poorly written by someone who forgot what it's like to be a child, and doesn't have one of their own, nor knows anyone who does, that she's just completely unbelievable. A very small number of the ridiculously long and dwelling shots actually work, and the acting by the mom is passable, so it's a very low two-star rating.