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Columnist: BBC Three
Biography: You know my dad actually wrote the song Wonderwall on the back of a beer mat in the space of 10 minutes, don't you?
2018
user Ratings - 7 of 10
Stars - Bill Nighy
country - UK
Creator - Frank Cottrell Boyce
91 minute
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Download free sometimes always never want. Download Free Sometimes Always neverwinter. 8 /10 a portrait of a family desperately unable to communicate A single delicious narrative conceit drives the delightful Sometimes. Always. Never. (2018). It takes its own sweet time getting there, but when it does, it hits home: you can be an expert in words and their rules but be incapable of meaningful expression. Add a Scrabble obsession, mix it with deep grief and guilt, and you have a portrait of a family desperately unable to communicate with each other. The simplicity of the plotline stands in stark contrast to the complexity of its themes. Dapper rule-bound tailor Alan (Bill Nighy) is told that the body of his long-missing son Michael may have been found. He takes his younger estranged son Peter (Sam Riley) with him to identify the body, and at the morgue they meet other parents who are there for the same reason. It's a diversion that does little to advance the narrative, but it does provide comic respite from the pain of loss. Both relieved and disappointed with the outcome, Alan invites himself to stay with Peter and his family in the hope of reconciliation. With a threadbare plot, the power of this film comes from its theatrical settings, intelligent banter, and Nighy's trademark whimsical mannerisms and stylised performance. The label 'fantasy drama' has been applied to this film but is mis-leading and manifestly inadequate. If there is an element of fantasy, it derives from the way many scenes are played out against backgrounds that are have a surreal, even an absurdist two-dimensional feel that resembles a theatre set. Like all absurdism, there is an artful space between the underlying emotional intensity and the futility of ever trying to understand it. The gravelly Nighy is a master of under-statement, with a unique talent for giving shallow dialogue depth and humour. It's all about contrasts: Alan's obsession with a missing son and neglect of the son he still has; his fastidious Dymo labelling of everything as a substitute for control in his world; and his ability to make light of the heaviest emotions. If you are not a Nighy fan or prefer action-based stories, you may find little to appreciate in this film. In place of a forward-moving narrative it offers a portrait of a dysfunctional family torn apart over guilt and the inability to emotionally connect. The film's title is itself a parody of form over function, referring to the tailor's rule for how jacket buttons should be fastened: the top always, the middle sometimes, the bottom never. With no substantive relationship to the film's content, it's a rule as good as any on how to live one's life. 23 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote. Permalink 6 /10 Difficult to categorise but enjoyable enough. 'Sometimes Always Never (2019)' is a bit of an oddity, I suppose, because of its combination of mundanity and quirkiness. It tells a grounded - though, ever-so-slightly absurdist - story with a real emotional weight to it, often with genuine subtlety but more frequently with a strange sort of passivity, and tends to toe the line between comedy and drama to the point that a distinction between the two isn't really worth making. It's not like it's particularly unfocused or haphazard, however, as it certainly feels calculated. Yet, even in its almost articulated unwillingness to conform to convention, there's a sort of intangible sense that it doesn't quite know how odd it is. It's exactly what it wants, and needs, to be. As you can tell, it's a fairly difficult experience to categorise. All in all, though, it's an enjoyable one. It has a compelling central theme and a nice set of main characters, even if the former isn't fleshed out as much as you'd like thanks to a somewhat baggy mid-section. The tone of the thing also fluctuates a little. Usually, it balances the serious with the silly, making sure that both do a decent job of developing character, but there are some moments that make you wish the movie would make its mind up as to whether or not its world is actually 'heightened' (which could be pushed further, if that is the case). It sometimes sounds overly 'written', too; this isn't necessarily a bad thing, but the sequences where you actually notice the writing pale in comparison to the ones where you don't. I'll also say that, while it's well directed overall, there are some visual stylistic choices that I don't think pay off. Of course, these issues don't prevent the flick from being generally entertaining. It's somewhat endearing, with great performances and (from what came through in the final result) a good screenplay. It's not perfect, or indeed overly satisfying, and its odd tone - or general 'status', I guess - does make it a bit difficult to get a handle on. Still, it's a good effort that nicely tells a personal, rather unique story. 6/10 14 out of 17 found this helpful. Such a clever script and concept- What a clever quirky little movie that proves when done well the British succeed where other fail. No plot or spoilers here as it would ruin the movie but all the performances headed by Bill Nighy as Alan are superb. Bill Nighy plays droll eccentric old men better than anyone I can think of I can't imagine anyone else doing justice to this role. The last time I saw Bill Nighy in a movie was The Bookshop and even though it was not the starring role, he played an almost Dickensian character he stole that movie The only thing I'll say about the story is that it's about two families, both have suffered loss and both are bought together by the game of Scrabble. The supporting cast of Sam Riley as Peter Alan's son and Jenny Agutter, (out of habit as Sister Jullienne) well and truly in this film plays Margaret touchingly and with great humour, this is a very funny movie, almost a comedy but with a lot of pathos Tim McInnerny as Margaret 's droll husband is also very good. Also the rest of the cast Alice Lowe, as Peters wife and Oliver Sindcup as young Peter are very very good. Frank Cottrell Boyce, who wrote screenplays for Goodbye Christopher Columbus, Railway Man, and Hillary and Jackie among other films and television is one of the most respected writers for the British screen and it's easy to understand why. I don't know much about director the Carl Hunter but if Sometimes Always Never is an example of his directing I hope to see more of his movies. Don't miss this one. 18 out of 25 found this helpful. Loved the quirkiness of the film I loved the movie. Bill Nighy is superb in anything he does, the rest of the cast were wonderful. It was written with humour, wittiness with a hint of sadness. 21 out of 30 found this helpful. 7 /10 Still and clear photography!!! It is a joy to watch it. First, because of its style of shooting and second, because of its clear and rich colors. It looks as an brilliant school art, designed precisely. On the other hand it is a good story, done in some traditional and emotional way, and who is playing in. Bill Nighy is as always excellent, elegant and charming. 4 out of 4 found this helpful. 10 /10 Nigh on genius Quaint, quiet, quirky - call it what you will. It wore its heart on its sleeve and didn't pretend to be anything more than it was;- a personal tale about family and the effect of loss on those who remain. Even without all the crash, boom, bang of a tentpole blockbuster, a movie can still pack a punch. Moreso if it delves into the metaphysical. Bill Nighy is in top form but so are the supporting cast in less bombastic but crucial... supporting roles. Alexei Sayles is surreal! Heaps of effort has gone into making the visuals of each 'simple' scene pop off the screen. You appreciate so much more of these modest films when you see them on the big screen. Do yourselves a favour. I laughed quite a bit too. 19 out of 28 found this helpful. gentle masterpiece Loved this one, beautiful in every way. Judicious use of animation and old home video. 18 out of 28 found this helpful. Quirky! If it wasn't for the presence of mobile phones and computer games you'd think that this was set in the 60's! Bill Nighy is sparsely twinkly, just enough to make me stay in my seat for the entire film. A good cast, an intriguing storyline, almost a period piece. I think Bill must have it in his contract for every piece he does to wear a good coat. (Apart from Dads Army). 4 out of 5 found this helpful. 5 /10 Not even my love for Bill Nighy could draw me in I so wanted to love this film. All the right ingredients but none of the pathos required to draw me in. Every time I got close to feeling something the film flashed up another Wes Anderson-esque quirk-with none of the meaning that so cleverly underpins his work-and made me feel like I was a spectator. Great ideas suffered from a flat execution. 15 out of 27 found this helpful. 2 /10 Style over any semblance of substance There's honestly nothing in the movie story wise. Instead it's a film made like a love letter to the worst parts of Wes Anderson. Angles, gimmicks, kitsch - and repeat and repeat and repeat. No pacing, no heart and no memorable moments Very disappointing 24 out of 47 found this helpful. Really awkward I rarely dislike films but I found this one painfully awkward and predictable. 16 out of 31 found this helpful. 9 /10 Incredibly unique drama Sometimes Always Never is an incredibly unique drama that's stylized, colourful, very funny and emotional. Bill Nighy and Sam Riley are both amazing and Alice Low is great. Carl Hunter's direction is fantastic and it's well filmed and colourful. The pacing is great and the music by Edwyn Collins and Sean Read is excellent. However, it's brought down slightly by the driving sequences which do look cheap in comparison to everything else. 2 out of 2 found this helpful. A WORK OF ART..! kmpy 16 January 2020 Every shot of this film is a work of art - the Director, Artistic Director and Cinematographer should all win awards for this film... The sets and backdrops are just wonderful...! I could quite happily leave the film on freeze-frame on my wall mounted tv as a painting... The casting was inspired, the dialog is great and the whole thing has just the perfect level of quirkiness. When it finished, I went straight on to to see what else the Director had done and was amazed to see that the answer was, very little else... why..? (Please let's have more of his work! ). All in all, the best film I've seen in a long time. Bill Nighy and Marmite I will watch pretty much any film with the wonderful Bill Nighy. Just watched this one and not sure what I think of it. His character, wildly knowledgeable when it comes to Scrabble, was 100% wrong when he stated that Marmite is banned in Canada. No, my friend, it definitely isn't. I have a jar in my own cupboard. I actually had to have a look and confirm that it is, indeed, Marmite, and not the poor substitute Vegemite (which he claimed was the only option for Canadians). Marmite has been available here for at least 10 years and, since the film obviously takes place in the present, he was just plain wrong. Now I'm thinking that if the availability of Marmite is my lingering thought after seeing this film, how memorable was it? It DOES meander, as others have said. It DOES try awfully hard to be visually quirky to the point of being absurd at times. It does convey somewhat the damage done to people when someone they love goes missing. There's no closure; they spend their lives from that point on grieving, wondering, blaming, searching and, likely, never really having a carefree moment again. That was certainly brought home to me in all its sadness. If you need cheering up, this is not the film for you. Is this a vitally important film? No. Not even sure why it was made. It's like reading a short story, which is what it was based on, finished in 90 minutes or so and easily forgotten. 7 out of 12 found this helpful. A family story Really loved every minutes of the film. For me it was a real story with humor and sadness in the same time. I'm not a young man (40y), so I had a lot of similar experience with my family. The life is the same, you cannot avoid sad things, but always can laugh after the hard times. Thats family, you love and hate eachother, but at the end always love there. The actors were excellent and Bill was the one as usual. I'm happy to be able this film in artcinema even in Hungary. Of course this film is not for the crowd. They just should watch Avengers 11. :) And finally it was preatty good to see how british people are living. The small house with uspters, small cars, and scrabble of course. :) Really liked them. 9 out of 17 found this helpful. An Enjoyable Flick! Just to address the marmite topic brought up by another reviewer: It was illustrated in the film that Billy Nighy's character Alan was not a reliable story teller. He liked to tell tall tales, like the one about the grandmother with the coal seam in the basement. Going back to the movie, I thought it was quirky like everyone mentioned. I knew it wasn't going to be a straight forward dramedy based on the bizarre, artificial riding in car scenes. It looked like it was done in a 1950s B movie style. Thankfully the movie dials back on that and delivers a fairly straight forward, drama comedy framed around the game of scrabble, but really about Alan and his son Peter, as they try to solve the mystery of the missing son Michael. The body viewing scene (which we don't see) was particularly odd, because we were told that Michael went missing many many years ago when he and Peter were still children. So why would they be called to identify a body? If it was an adult's body, how would they know it was him. Usually they do DNA tests anyway. Other than that weird start, and some scene involving a boat (or did it? ), much of the movie follows a fairly linear format. I think it helps that every character in the movie had something to offer the movie, and generally everyone was likeable. You kind of hoped there would be a resolution of the 'mystery', but ultimately it didn't really matter. Nothing is really 'solved' by the ending, except maybe Peter wasn't as resentful of his missing brother's 'Prodigal Son' stature, and maybe Alan realized it was time to focus on his existing family. 3 out of 4 found this helpful. A student movie where experiments rarely work. Warning: Spoilers How can a movie that has so much wrong with it, be watchable through to the end? Well this is such a film. Deeply flawed on just about every level the film leans heavily on Bill Nighy's screen presene to sustain audience attention. But even Bill needs a strong director and this film has been directed by a 'wannabe auteur' who hasn't even got out of film school diapers. There is not one technical area that he doesn't mangle, while the script misses so much potential. Set in Merseyside we have so few examples of scouser wit to enjoy, and even the voice coach only manages to squeeze a slight scouse accent out of Nighy. Performances all round unanimously lack emotion, some actors look as if they have no idea why they are there and some scenes seem to have been edited in from another production by mistake e. g. the Alexy Sayle scene. YET I was amused at times (especially the Bill and Jenny bathroom scene) and loved a few little bits of whimsy, and I did stay to the end. Am not sure why, but I do believe you have to see weak films to really enjoy the strong ones. 13 out of 28 found this helpful. 1 /10 The last tiles in the bag There is absolutely nothing to this film. Thin story, underdeveloped characters and a meandering pace. It tries to be smart and 'cool' by mixing the present with a 60s retro vibe which makes absolutely zero sense when the main character is playing online Scrabble half of the time. Quite what Bill Nighy was doing in this Ill thought out meandering mess is anyone's guess. To use a Scrabble analogy, it's like drawing 7 consanants with no vowels. Avoid. 10 out of 25 found this helpful. A Confusing Plot! (Matches The Game I Guess)! The plot of the movie is very hard to follow and requires concentration like a game of scrabble would. But after thinking about the movie for a while, I understood the plot and it all made sense. (It also helped me with a few scrabble pointers. ) For the concentration to understand, I give it a 7/10. 2 out of 3 found this helpful. Quirky, stylish yet with genuine substance There is an almost surreal air to this film, which at first I found disconcerting: the editing and the photography a little like good, but not perfect, animation; the performances, somehow awkwardly theatrical. Nonetheless, as we learn about the characters: their backstory and motivation, the reasons all begin to make delicious sense. Could it be something to do with father Alan's ( Bill Nighy) insistence when younger upon, for instance, buying his sons Revell rather than Airfix models and playing the cheap substitute for, rather than the genuine Scrabble - a game of which provoked one son to vanish and leave brother (Sam Riley) feeling both bereft and unable to fill the place in his father's life. Is the furniture in the house stylishly, yet incongruously from the 1970s to remind everyone what the everyday world may have looked like when brother Mike disappeared? A beautifully paced and framed film. Wonderful performances, from Nighy, Riley and Alice Lowe as his wife. Tim McInnerny, Jenny Agutter and, briefly, Alexei Sayle, provide those awkward, yet somehow consistent characters; 'misfits' who make our key characters, and us realise that nobody's life is really that strange. 5 out of 12 found this helpful. 3 /10 heartwarming and quirky I loved this movie, sometimes the acting was very theatrical, the angles unusual and the greenscreen amateurish.. but then thats the genius. This movie made me think of all those effected by a family loss. those left behind and how the focus then is never on them again. heartwarming and sad. 6 out of 19 found this helpful. A gem The title's play of words, while having a specific reference (the "three-button rule" for wearing a three-button suit), may also lead you to think about the word game Scrabble. If you do, you are on the right track. There is one other movie "Snow Cake" (2006) that has one hilarious Scrabble scene. In "Sometime Always Never", Scrabble plays a pivotal role. The protagonist Alan's (Bill Nighy) "prodigal son" Michael walked out in the middle of a game with his father and never returned. His mother soon died, leaving younger son Peter (Sam Riley) in an awkward relationship with their father. The story starts years later when Peter himself has already become a father, to a teenage son. Scrabble games (with friends and with family), wisely not overused, threads the story. After Alan becomes addicted to online games, a mystery develops as he encounters a player whose playing style and word usage is suspiciously like Michael's. I mentioned "Snow Cake". An absolutely first-class movie with Sigourney Weaver's brilliant portrayal of an autistic woman, among other things. "Sometime Always Never", while not quite reaching that level of complexity and depth, is itself a little gem. Delightfully minimalist, it revolves around a family that you can easily root for - father and son having difficulties communicating but love clearly palpable, slightly eccentric yet very likeable wife (a chemist who floods the Scrabble board with chemical terms), totally normal and cheerful teenager with a sweet, pleasant girlfriend. A perfect picture of blissful domesticity that is shadowed by the history of the disappearance of one of its members. The two leads are such joy to watch, particularly Nighy. It is hard to think of anyone who can do this better. Oh, maybe one. Alan Arkin (think "The Kominski method"). 0 out of 0 found this helpful. Sometimes Always Never A man's life is taken up with trying to find his lost son who ran out after a row when playing scrabble, an important game in the the man's life and which he come to believe has links to his son's whereabouts. Quirky and just a bit weird, this is a likeable, mostly light hearted tale that almost entirely relies on Bill Nighy's particular style of delivery to pull off which it just about does. It is a small, rather unique, stage like creation which is often quite funny to watch with Nighy front and centre throughout the whole piece, but with a fine supporting cast - nice to see Jenny Agutter do an atypical role for a change - and so well. Not for everyone though. It felt more like a play than a film The flow of the film felt more like a play than a film. It did have a certain amount of charm though. I thought all the actors did a good job. This is the worst movie ever. All the cast and crews have written the 10 star reviews for this piece of trash. Such a waste of time! Anything that has to do with watching paint dry, you might like this movie. If you enjoy watching someone sitting at a table while drinking a cup over coffee staring at the wall for five minutes, you might like this movie. You are watching the most boring person on the face of the earth do their routine for what ever reason they are doing it until the camera just stops following them. If this is suppose to be "art". I hate art. 5 out of 21 found this helpful. Permalink.
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Download free sometimes always never dance. Critics Consensus Like the grieving Scrabble enthusiast at the heart of its unique story, Sometimes Always Never scores high enough to be well worth a play. 87% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 47 Coming soon Release date: Apr 17, 2020 Audience Score Ratings: Not yet available Sometimes Always Never (Triple Word Score) Ratings & Reviews Explanation Sometimes Always Never (Triple Word Score) Videos Photos Movie Info Alan is a stylish tailor with moves as sharp as his suits. He has spent years searching tirelessly for his missing son Michael who stormed out over a game of Scrabble. With a body to identify and his family torn apart, Alan must repair the relationship with his youngest son Peter and solve the mystery of an online player who he thinks could be Michael, so he can finally move on and reunite his family. Rating: PG-13 (for thematic elements and some sexual references) Genre: Directed By: Written By: In Theaters: Apr 17, 2020 limited Runtime: 91 minutes Studio: Blue Fox Entertainment Cast Critic Reviews for Sometimes Always Never (Triple Word Score) Audience Reviews for Sometimes Always Never (Triple Word Score) There are no featured reviews for Sometimes Always Never (Triple Word Score) because the movie has not released yet (Apr 17, 2020). See Movies in Theaters Sometimes Always Never (Triple Word Score) Quotes Movie & TV guides.
Oh hey, Frank Cottrell Boyce wrote this? I may need to see this now. 0:20 - The 2011 Fox Searchlight Pictures logo plays backwards. Download free sometimes always never play. Download free sometimes always never go. Download Free Sometimes Always never mind. Download free sometimes always never lyrics.
Where is the outrage against this movie? Unplanned had so many haters 🤔. Woman: START SPANKING YOUR KIDS Cop: you remind me of my mom 😂😂😂. Synopsis His son is missing, his family is lost, but his dress sense is immaculate. Alan is a stylish tailor with moves as sharp as his suits. He has spent years searching tirelessly for his missing son Michael who stormed out over a game of Scrabble. With a body to identify and his family torn apart, Alan must repair the relationship with his youngest son and solve the mystery of an online player who he thinks could be Michael, so he can finally move on and reunite his family. Cast Crew Details Genres Director Writer Editor Cinematography Studios Country Language Alternative Title A szavak ereje Popular reviews More Finally, a movie for people who love scrabble/word games. Hurricane Films. Cinema 2. 35:1 Colour Codex 12A Sometimes Always Never is a beautifully intimate portrait of the tragedy and hope found in life. Nighy and Riley are fantastic. The intentionally skewed chemistry is nlovely with a fiery stoic calamity flowing through both characters eins. The cinematography and aesthetic implemented here is truly gorgeous comparable to the likes of Wes Anderson or even Roy Anderson for it's simplistic but effective aesthetic. 91 FULL REVIEW AT NERDLY UK this film really decided to replicate my sixth form experience huh, where not only did I not communicate my attraction to the boys I clearly liked and stood beside, but because my sixth form wi-fi blocked all social media and YouTube (except for ‘educational’ use) and I refused to buy paid apps, I ended up distracting myself from work all the time by playing Mattel’s Scrabble app on my Zte phone (a cheap substitution run on the Android OS, which seems fitting with the film’s themes) against the computer and accounts all around the world and then to connect this to the sense of being lost, finding something, distracting and covering the hole in yourself, and substituting everything with bootlegs and knock-offs from ‘Action Joes’ to Vegemite to sexual partners to sons and CGI big-bosomed female avatars to the car you drive in and the seaside town you chose to exist within? damn Or Wes Anderson on the Wirral. The feature length directorial debut of Carl Hunter, former bassist with '90s Liverpudlian group The Farm, is a sweet little movie - though perhaps too sweet for some. Aesthetically it is indeed very Wes Anderson, taking its cue from a lovely, theatrical screenplay from Frank Cottrell Boyce that is dense with nostalgic, deeply suburban details. As such, we get purposefully, noticeably fake backdrops and back projection for driving sequences and title-cards made up of retro wallpaper and vintage products. It's all pleasingly done, but the artificiality of it all does sometimes mask the genuine heart that beats within the narrative and the warmth of the playing of an excellent cast that includes Bill Nighy, … It's like the director got handed the script for an earnest, moving drama about paternal relationships and then decided to mainline Wes Anderson and Richard Ayoade films for a week, deciding at the last minute to 'do that'. This is a huge tonal mess. Its aesthetic sensibilities completely undermine the emotional story at the heart of everything and not even Bill Nighy can hold it all together. watched this bc matty healy it was kinda cute i wish the entire movie revolved around the grandpa and grandson not gonna lie Recent reviews Full disclosure, this film is directed by my dissertation supervisor who I've been dodging for months now because I haven't written a word and its due in less than a month so I'm thinking maybe if I watch his film I can distract him from that fact. It's pretty good. EDIT: The deadline has been pushed back! So basically I watched this film for no reason. If you like Scrabble and Wes Anderson this film is for you. RT Score: 87 My Score: 68 It’s a completely fine watch. I'm so confused as to whether this film classifies as a 2018 release (IMDB), 2019 release (Metacritic), or 2020 release (Rotten Tomatoes). Since it hit North American theatres in the latter half of 2019, that is what I'll consider it. Sometimes Always Never is a very peculiar movie. The film embraces its indie nature with interesting creative decisions. The editing might be snappy during certain scenes, or the production design artsy. The camera might split, rotate, cut to a title card. While these choices didn't work sometimes, they were always neat to see and never dull. Jokes aside, there were a few choices that struck me as odd and inconsistent, but for the most part they added an extra element… Look at the cast, the title, the poster. Now make your assumptions. Yeah, this film is way better than you think it is. Stylishly, done and beautifully written. The Scrabble motif is a lovely thematic flourish. An absolutely wonderful comedy, Sometimes Always Never has a script that shines as brightly as it’s cast. It’s very well written, the progression of the plot is often unexpected while always remaining poignant. Every new piece of information feels foreshadowed and earned, while the deeper emotional moments are cushioned by delightful dry British humour. It’s hilarious, heartwarming, and honest. My only real complaint is that the women in the cast aren’t given much opportunity to be funny despite the inclusion of funny people like Alice Lowe. A father's inability to get over a long-missing child causes dismay in his other son. Quirkily idiosyncratic and dryly funny yet tremendously affecting family drama. Production design and photography are often gorgeous, and the inspiredly assembled cast doesn't disappoint. Delightful. We liked the visual style in this film. Nice colours and there were some interesting stylistic touches. Popular Lists My Favorite Movie Posters Just a list of some pretty cool movie posters on the LB database. I haven't seen most of these movies. … My Top 100 Well, here it is. Once I got to 1000 films watched I thought it was finally time to make one….
'Never Rarely Sometimes Always' Will Stay With You Forever Sidney Flanigan stars as 17-year-old Autumn in Never Rarely Sometimes Always. Courtesy of Focus Features hide caption toggle caption I'm reluctant to explain why Eliza Hittman's new movie is called Never Rarely Sometimes Always. It's a mouthful, to be sure; few people I talked to at this year's Sundance Film Festival could remember it correctly. But then we saw the movie — and after that, a lot of us knew the title would stay with us forever. Let's just say that the words Never Rarely Sometimes Always refer to four possible answers on a multiple-choice questionnaire. The title is meant to sound a little nondescript, and you might say something similar about the movie's teenage protagonist, Autumn, who's played by a remarkable first-time actress named Sidney Flanigan. Autumn seems at first like a conventionally moody 17-year-old living in a small Pennsylvania town. She goes to school and likes to sing and play the guitar. She has a kind mom and a surly stepdad, neither of whom pay her much attention. Her closest and maybe only friend is her cousin Skylar (Talia Ryder). Autumn and Skylar are both pretty taciturn by nature, but they have an almost subliminal ability to communicate with each other, as when Autumn confides that she's pregnant and planning to have an abortion. Autumn doesn't want to tell her parents, and because, as a minor, she falls under Pennsylvania's parental consent laws, she plans to have the abortion in New York City. Skylar, of course, decides to go with her. And so they stuff their pockets with cash, cook up an excuse for their families and hop on the next bus to New York. But navigating the confusion of one of the world's biggest cities and the American health-care system turns out to be more complicated and time-consuming than either of them had imagined. With barely enough money for food, let alone a hotel room, the girls spend a lot of their time waiting around the Port Authority Bus Terminal. After a while the place starts to feel like purgatory, where they are forever doomed to drag their hugely impractical brown suitcase up and down stairs and through turnstiles. A Sundance jury awarded Never Rarely Sometimes Always a prize for "neo-realism, " an odd citation that nonetheless captures something of the film's distinctly European art-house flavor. It's there in the spareness of Hittman's dialogue, the fluidity of the handheld camerawork by the French cinematographer Hélène Louvart and the obvious amount of research that went into the scenes at Planned Parenthood, all of which feel rigorously naturalistic. More than once I was reminded of the great 2007 film 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, about a teenager helping her best friend obtain an illegal abortion in communist Romania. Although Never Rarely Sometimes Always is nowhere near that bleak, it's the most pointed and confrontational American drama about abortion rights that I've seen in recent memory. And it seems timely with a major case on the subject before the now conservative-dominated Supreme Court. But while Hittman's position couldn't be clearer, there's no grandstanding in her approach. She simply paints a matter-of-fact portrait of two young women in a difficult but all-too-believable situation, in which there are no easy answers. She's also making a crucial point about the casual misogyny and sexually aggressive behavior that women experience on a regular basis. Throughout the film, Autumn and Skylar find themselves on the receiving end of persistent and unwanted male attention, whether it's from their touchy-feely boss at the grocery store where they work part-time, the creep on the subway or even the kinda-charming young guy who chats up Skylar on the bus. These encounters build to an emotionally shattering scene in which Autumn has to tell a counselor at the clinic about the circumstances of her pregnancy. As good as she is at hiding her emotions, she simply can't hide them any longer. Autumn doesn't spell out her entire backstory, and she doesn't have to. Flanigan's performance reminds us that restraint can be revelatory; I've rarely seen an actress take so many mumbled one-word responses and play them with such feeling. Some of the most moving moments are those in which she and Skylar simply clasp hands, sustaining each other through the toughest ordeal of their young lives.
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