Popularity: 4 (history)
Director: | David O. Russell |
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Writer: | David O. Russell, Matthew Quick |
Staring: |
After losing his job and wife, and spending time in an institution, a former teacher winds up living with his parents. He wants to rebuild his life and reconcile with his wife, but his father would be happy if he shared his obsession with the Philadelphia Eagles. Things get complicated when he meets Tiffany Maxwell who offers to help him reconnect with his wife if he will do something very important for her in exchange. | |
Release Date: | Nov 16, 2012 |
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Director: | David O. Russell |
Writer: | David O. Russell, Matthew Quick |
Genres: | Comedy, Drama, Romance |
Keywords | dancing, philadelphia, pennsylvania, based on novel or book, depression, infidelity, letter, widow, friendship, superstition, dance competition, teacher, mental institution, therapy, mental illness, ex-wife, institutionalization, death of husband, unfaithful wife, father son relationship |
Production Companies | The Weinstein Company |
Box Office |
Revenue: $236,412,453
Budget: $21,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Sep 12, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Bradley Cooper | Pat Solatano Jr. |
Jennifer Lawrence | Tiffany Maxwell |
Robert De Niro | Pat Solatano Sr. |
Jacki Weaver | Dolores Solatano |
Anupam Kher | Dr. Cliff Patel |
Chris Tucker | Danny McDaniels |
Julia Stiles | Veronica |
Shea Whigham | Jake Solatano |
John Ortiz | Ronnie |
Paul Herman | Randy |
Dash Mihok | Officer Keogh |
Matthew Russell | Ricky D'Angelo |
Cheryl Williams | Tiffany's Mother |
Patrick McDade | Tiffany's Father |
Brea Bee | Nikki |
Mary Regency Boies | Regina |
Phillip Chorba | Jordie |
Anthony Lawton | Dr. Timbers |
Patsy Meck | Nancy (High School Principal) |
Maureen Torsney-Weir | Older Waitress |
Jeff Reim | Jeffrey |
Fritz Blanchette | Fritzy |
Rick Foster | Dance Competition Announcer |
Bonnie Aarons | Ricky D'Angelo's Mother |
Ted Barba | Doug Culpepper |
Elias Birnbaum | Ricky D'Angelo's Friend #1 |
Matthew Michaels | Ricky D'Angelo's Friend #2 |
Pete Postiglione | Lawyer at Bar |
Dicky Eklund Jr. | Fighting Eagle Fan |
Sanjay Shende | Indian Invasion #1 |
Mihir Pathak | Indian Invasion #2 |
Ibrahim Syed | Indian Invasion #3 |
Madhu Narula | Dr. Patel's Wife |
Samantha Gelnaw | Jake's Fiancée |
Tiffany E. Green | Tanya |
Tal Lifshitz | Dancer Santos |
Vlada Semenova | Dancer Aguilar |
Zhan Paulovich | Dancer Makarov |
Lana Rossi | Dancer Tretiak |
Todd Anthony | Dinner Guest (uncredited) |
Traci Law | Dinner Guest (uncredited) |
Carol Anne Mueller | Dance Competition Spectator (uncredited) |
Robert Bizik | Neighbor (uncredited) |
Jeffrey Mowery | Neighbor (uncredited) |
Joe Cappelletti | Football Play By Play Announcer (voice, uncredited) |
Lindsay Schnebly | Football Play By Play Announcer (voice, uncredited) |
Luisa Diaz | MILF (uncredited) |
Liam Ferguson | Singing Eagles Fan (uncredited) |
Jae Greene | Tailgater (uncredited) |
Marty Krzywonos | Tailgater (uncredited) |
Matthew James Gulbranson | Father (uncredited) |
David Kneeream | Moviegoer (uncredited) |
Raymond Mamrak | Tailgate Fan (uncredited) |
Montana Marks | Bikini Tailgater (uncredited) |
Jeni Miller | Sexy Girl at Halloween Party (uncredited) |
Charles Pendelton | Recital Guest (uncredited) |
Vincent Riviezzo | Giants Fan (uncredited) |
Ryan Shank | Bartender (uncredited) |
Ryan Tygh | Zombie Guy (uncredited) |
Jen Weissenberg | Tomboy Girl (uncredited) |
Brian Anthony Wilson | Orderly (uncredited) |
Mike Wilson | Eagles Tailgater (uncredited) |
Thomas Walton | Giants Suck - Fan (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
Jalil Jay Lynch | Stunt Double |
Bill Anagnos | Stunt Driver |
Manny Ayala | Stunts |
Chris Barnes | Stunts |
Keenen Bray | Stunts |
Kevin Abercrombie | Stunts |
Jared Burke | Stunts |
Derek Graf | Stunts |
Robert Lee Harvey | Stunts |
Tony Guida | Stunts |
Samantha MacIvor | Stunt Double |
Frank Torres | Utility Stunts |
Rene Mousseux | Utility Stunts |
Michael Trisler | Stunt Double |
Mark Fichera | Stunts |
David O. Russell | Director, Screenplay |
Matthew Quick | Novel |
Danny Elfman | Original Music Composer |
Jay Cassidy | Editor |
Judy Becker | Production Design |
Heather Loeffler | Set Decoration |
Mark Bridges | Costume Design |
Masanobu Takayanagi | Director of Photography |
Lori McCoy-Bell | Hairstylist |
Susan Jacobs | Music Supervisor |
Jen Weissenberg | Stunts |
Tim Clawson | Executive In Charge Of Production |
Ben Hernandez Bray | Stunt Coordinator |
Anthony Minghella | Thanks |
Frank Smathers | Dialogue Editor |
Chris Cenatiempo | Stunts |
Jennifer Lamb | Stunt Double |
Michele Ziegler | First Assistant Director |
Philip Tallman | Music Editor |
Sydney Pollack | Thanks |
Jesse Rosenthal | Art Direction |
Lindsay Graham Ahanonu | Casting |
Diane Heller | Makeup Artist |
Drew Jiritano | Special Effects Coordinator |
Marjorie Eber | Art Department Coordinator |
Karen Golden | Script Supervisor |
Angeline Zeigler | Set Costumer |
Jerry Popolis | Hairstylist |
Lynda Foote | Costume Supervisor |
Rhea Lowenthal | Set Costumer |
Maya Hardinge | Makeup Artist |
Patricia Grande | Hairstylist |
David Raynor | Production Coordinator |
JoJo Whilden | Still Photographer |
David J. Thompson | "A" Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Dick Bernstein | Music Editor |
Crispin Struthers | Editor |
Odin Benitez | Supervising Sound Editor |
Jeff Sawyer | Sound Effects Editor |
Angelo Palazzo | Sound Effects Editor |
John Ross | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Myron Nettinga | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Tim Pedegana | Post Production Supervisor |
Kaspar Hugentobler | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Patty Connolly | Casting |
Richie Ford | Rigging Gaffer |
Christopher T. Welch | ADR Editor |
Tom Nelson | Sound Mixer |
Mike Szakmeister | Dialogue Editor |
Susan Kurtz | Dialogue Editor |
Eliza Pollack Zebert | Supervising Dialogue Editor, Supervising ADR Editor |
Weston Middleton | Production Assistant |
Mark Kamine | Unit Production Manager |
George Parra | Unit Production Manager |
Xanthus Valan | Second Assistant Director |
Donald Burghardt | First Assistant "A" Camera |
Julian J. Delacruz | Second Assistant "A" Camera |
Chris Reynolds | "B" Camera Operator |
Glenn Kaplan | First Assistant "B" Camera |
Anthony DeFrancesco | Second Assistant "B" Camera |
Jason Rihaly | Clapper Loader |
Timothy Blockburger | Second Second Assistant Director |
Mary Vernieu | Casting |
Eddie J. Fernandez | Stunts |
Mandy Moore | Choreographer |
Alex Bickel | Digital Colorist |
Name | Title |
---|---|
Bruce Cohen | Producer |
Bob Weinstein | Executive Producer |
Michelle Raimo Kouyate | Executive Producer |
George Parra | Executive Producer |
Jonathan Gordon | Producer |
Donna Gigliotti | Producer |
Renee Witt | Co-Executive Producer |
Mark Kamine | Co-Producer |
Harvey Weinstein | Executive Producer |
Bradley Cooper | Executive Producer |
Organization | Category | Person | |
---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards | Best Picture | N/A | Nominated |
Academy Awards | Best Actor | Bradley Cooper | Nominated |
Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Robert De Niro | Nominated |
Academy Awards | Best Actress | Jennifer Lawrence | Won |
Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Jacki Weaver | Nominated |
Golden Globes | Best Actor | Bradley Cooper | Nominated |
Golden Globes | Best Picture | N/A | Nominated |
Golden Globes | Best Director | David O. Russell | Nominated |
Golden Globes | Best Supporting Actor | Christoph Waltz | Won |
BAFTA Awards | Best Actress | Jennifer Lawrence | Won |
BAFTA Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Chris Tucker | Nominated |
BAFTA Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Jacki Weaver | Nominated |
Spirit Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Chris Tucker | Nominated |
SAG Awards | Best Actor | Bradley Cooper | Nominated |
SAG Awards | Best Actress | Jennifer Lawrence | Won |
SAG Awards | Best Director | David O. Russell | Nominated |
SAG Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Robert De Niro | Nominated |
SAG Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Jacki Weaver | Won |
Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
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2024 | 4 | 34 | 45 | 25 |
2024 | 5 | 36 | 49 | 24 |
2024 | 6 | 40 | 76 | 27 |
2024 | 7 | 39 | 76 | 21 |
2024 | 8 | 30 | 46 | 23 |
2024 | 9 | 28 | 39 | 19 |
2024 | 10 | 27 | 38 | 19 |
2024 | 11 | 28 | 35 | 23 |
2024 | 12 | 30 | 47 | 21 |
2025 | 1 | 33 | 48 | 25 |
2025 | 2 | 32 | 49 | 7 |
2025 | 3 | 10 | 29 | 2 |
2025 | 4 | 8 | 13 | 4 |
2025 | 5 | 7 | 14 | 4 |
2025 | 6 | 6 | 11 | 4 |
2025 | 7 | 5 | 5 | 4 |
2025 | 8 | 5 | 7 | 4 |
2025 | 9 | 6 | 10 | 4 |
2025 | 10 | 4 | 5 | 4 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 9 | 423 | 702 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 8 | 854 | 899 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 6 | 601 | 800 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 4 | 633 | 796 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 3 | 758 | 828 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 2 | 436 | 691 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 1 | 779 | 859 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 11 | 313 | 313 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 9 | 932 | 957 |
**Dolly Mopping** (29 January 2013) Jennifer Lawrence is one magnificent slut. Her performance in _Silver Linings_ is a tour de force. She nails it. Not since Jennifer Jason Lee in _Last Exit to Brooklyn_ has a trashy trollop been played so convincingly. She easily deserves to win the Oscar for ... best actress and for any other category the film might win since she is the reason it's in the running at all. It's not easy being a slut. And harder still garnering sympathy for one. We can never be certain if her salacious wonts are biological or self-imposed. The grand old whore is a whole lot more desirable. She is typically forced into a her predicament for money or by male coercion. She's portrayed as a victim and tattooed with a heart of gold. But the nymphomaniac is a sadder sort. She's not as fetching or sentimental. Why should we care about her? It's clear that she either can't get enough carnal pleasure for herself or desperately seeks endless attention from men. Pathetic, is it not? But Lawrence absorbs the role and literally runs with it. Perhaps even re-writing the Dolly-Mop playbook. This movie will be required viewing for budding psychologists. And while Bradley Cooper does an impressive job bouncing the the bi-polar ball, we know he's acting. Fine work Mr. Cooper, no one else could have done it better, maybe. But down the street a few blocks, we entirely lose ourselves in Ms Lawrence. She deftly out-performs them all. Daniel Day Lincoln has to be relieved that there is a gender divide in the acting awards categories. Lawrence is so adept at playing the unapologetic slut that we suspect she's not acting. That she's spilling her guts. Revealing all the sores and warts of her true self. And this is what makes her so great in the movie.
Great watch, probably won't watch again, and can recommend. This is a great movie that I don't care about. I'm not a particularly big fan of either Bradley Cooper or Jennifer Lawrence, though they are clearly great actors, and give a fantastic performance in this, especially with the range of em ... otions delivered and broad spectrum of dialogue topics. It's about two sad, broken people who are trying to rehabilitate and release back into society despite their behavioral problems. While that is intriguing from a psychological perspective, I found it to be more sad than fun, which does make it powerful and worthy of awards and your attention, but it's not a movie that I'm going to re-watch lovingly. The writing is excellent: well structured and has good content, with an odd message that it is okay to lie to people when it is in their best interest so that you can get them to a potential to better themselves even if choose not too, and that is what love is. The movie also focuses a fair bit on proper etiquette of social interactions, football, and dancing: none of which I'm particularly fond of watching. So while there isn't a lot for me in this, objectively, I do believe that a lot of people will like this and it is well worth a watch.
**An excellent film.** I confess that this movie was better than I was expecting. I thought I would find a simple romantic comedy, conventional and relatively predictable, but I was very pleased with the way the story develops and the conception of the characters. The director, David O. Russell, ... is also responsible for _The Fighter_, a film that won two Oscars but that I don't think is as good as this one. The script is, in my opinion, quite well written, and follows Pat, a man who has just been released from a psychiatric hospital where he served a sentence of a few months, after catching his wife in the act of adultery and violently assaulting her lover. With his marriage over, he goes to his parents' house, his father being a crazy fan of the town's football team and seems to be convinced that having his son close during games brings good luck to the team. In the midst of his attempts to get close to his ex-wife (who has imposed an injunction on him by law), he approaches Tiffany, a young widow, with a strong temper and very explosive manners, who proposes to help him in swaps him being her date in a dance contest. The story is very good, and it is full of shenanigans arising from the volatility of Pat and Tiffany's personalities. The characters, played convincingly and very committed by Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence, are complex and demanding, and it was great to see the way in which the two actors were facing the challenge and solving what they had in front of them. Furthermore, Lawrence won the Oscar for the work done in this film, which, in addition, had seven other nominations – Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Editing. In addition to the duo of main actors, the film has an excellent supporting cast, including the impeccable Robert DeNiro, the wonderfully restrained and maternal Jacki Weaver, and the dysfunctional and strange couple played by Julia Styles and John Ortiz. In the midst of so many good things, is there anything less good or possibly bad? I think so. Although I really like the film in general, I feel that the ending was a little cliché, and that the solution found is a little too conventional for a film that seems to want to give us something different from most romantic comedies we are used to. I also thought that there are some characters that end up not getting enough attention (Julia Styles, John Ortiz, in a subplot that gets very sketchy and underdeveloped). But these are points that end up not detracting from the film's value, criticisms and minor repairs. On a technical level, I would like to positively highlight the excellence of the cinematography, with the film taking advantage of the good filming locations in the city of Philadelphia, and the editing, which makes the film pleasant, giving it the right pace. Good sets and costumes (in particular what is reserved for Lawrence, who has a somewhat depressing look) complete the positive values of a discrete production, without great effects or visual artifices.
It’s hard to find a film that is intimately relatable while not overly exaggerating or undermining human conditions. This is a movie where I saw myself in the characters, especially at a symptomatic time when I needed to see a story where people were in similar chaos and found coping mechanisms that ... reflected their personal battles. Pat manages through routine and structure, and Tiffany through movement and dance—both coping in ways that reflect who they are. It's a valuable portrayal that shows healing isn't one-size-fits-all—especially when deep breaths and meditation don't quite cut it. The heartfelt and extremely well-executed portrayals and discussions around bipolar episodes, psychosis, grief, relationship/family stability, depression, medications, diagnoses, and much, much more are refreshing and showed me that the harsh navigation toward proper treatment isn't so isolating. Its comforting vagueness mirrors real-life ambiguity and slow healing. This film reminds us that even though your struggles are unique and painful, you are never alone, and there is always someone—closer than you think—who can see right through you (in a good way) when others fail to do so. Pat feels alone in his effort to get better, especially when no one takes him seriously—and Tiffany gives him the connection he was missing. Things may take time, as they often do, but holding out for the light at the end of the tunnel (probably not a romantic dance competition) is worth it—you’ll get there. This film shows that recovery is messy but possible. Pat’s recovery is left open-ended—progress, not a cure. Symptoms weren’t cleared, but he’s not trapped anymore. He has stability, connection, and direction—and that’s the whole point. WATCH THIS MOVIE!!!