Résumés(1)

When Joel (Paul Rudd) and Molly (Amy Poehler) meet, it's hate at first sight: his big Corporate Candy Company threatens to shut down her quirky indie candy shop. Plus, Joel is hung up on his sexy ex (Cobie Smulders). But amazingly, they fall in love, until they break up about two thirds of the way through, and Molly starts dating her accountant (Ed Helms). But then right at the end... well you'll just have to see. (Hint: Joel makes a big speech and they get back together.) From the director of Wet Hot American Summer, Wanderlust and Role Models comes a hilarious and irreverent subversion of the romantic comedy genre. (The Film Arcade)

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Critiques (2)

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais I didn't believe that with this cast and this director, something truly good would come, but suddenly after a few minutes, I realized I wasn't watching a classic American comedy, but an amazing absurd theatrical performance that is actually a film. Great crazy situations and jokes that almost continue in the French and Czech traditions. An incredible surprise that will likely be very overlooked. ()

novoten 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Cinemas are still selling out nowadays with movies that are thirty years old or more and seen twenty times already, complaints are repeatedly heard that the parody genre is dead, and yet a gem like this is left aside and pretty much no one has seen it. And yet it turns the genre on its head, Paul Rudd and Amy Poehler outdo themselves and shoot one crazy word and nonverbal utterance after another, whether it grabs the viewer or not – and occasionally some more or less familiar face from Wet Hot American Summer comes to help them out. I laughed, I was shocked, I couldn't believe my eyes, but above all, I didn't understand why I hadn't shaken come together with this film myself earlier. That said, as I read more and more of the reviews, it seems that some people wouldn't recognize a sharp parody even if it hit them full in the face. When people start jibing that this comedy is somehow off, it makes me wonder if the joke's on them. ()

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