Check Out The Official Poster For THE SKELETON TWINS

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Here’s a look at the brand new poster for director Craig Johnson’s THE SKELETON TWINS. (via EW)

The film had it’s premiere in the US Dramatic Competition at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival.

As Jeffrey Wells’ (Hollywood Elsewhere) wrote after the Sundance screening, “Bill Hader‘s angry, vulnerable, hurting-guy performance in The Skeleton Twins is a career-changer. He’s no longer the SNL smartass who delivers zingy movie performances on the side. He’s now a real-deal actor who can bore into a character as deeply as any other gifted performer.”

As children, Maggie and Milo Dean seemed inseparable. But tragedy hit their family as teenagers when their father died, sending them on different paths, and ultimately leading to a decade-long estrangement. Now in their thirties, another set of near-tragedies brings them together. Melancholic Milo (Bill Hader), a frustrated actor with no prospects, decides to accept his sister’s offer to return to their hometown in bucolic upstate New York. However, he’s unaware that Maggie (Kristen Wiig) herself is barely holding it together, secretly unhappy despite her loving husband Lance (Luke Wilson).

Principal photography lasted for 22 tightly scheduled days. “Even with 22 days, it was an absolute dream shoot,” remembers Johnson. “It was so much fun that after day two or three, I thought to myself ‘Wow, things are really going okay!’ I didn’t dare say it out loud, but by the last couple of days we were all saying it!”

“It’s a dream,” says Hader. “It’s only Craig’s second movie, it’s a low budget movie on a tight schedule, but you’d never know it. It’s so relaxed and it all comes from the top down. The whole crew has been joyous, it’s like you never want it to end.”

Luke Wilson agrees: “Craig is really thoughtful and funny and I think there’s a certain power that comes with being laid back – that calmness that comes from being confident, which he definitely has.”

For Hader, Johnson’s passion for the characters are what made the process so gratifying. “He cares so much about these two people,” says Hader. “He hates watching scenes where we fight, hates seeing the characters when they are down. And it means the world when Craig comes up to me after a scene and says ‘you nailed that.'”

THE SKELETON TWINS will open in theaters September 19.

http://SkeletonTwinsMovie.com
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Photo – Courtesy of Roadside Attractions

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Watch The First Trailer For THE SKELETON TWINS – Stars Kristen Wiig And Bill Hader

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Poet Maya Angelou writes “I don’t believe accident of birth makes people sisters or brothers. Sisterhood and brotherhood is a condition people have to work at.”

As children, Maggie and Milo Dean seemed inseparable. But tragedy hit their family as teenagers when their father died, sending them on different paths, and ultimately leading to a decade-long estrangement. Now in their thirties, another set of near-tragedies brings them together. Melancholic Milo (Bill Hader), a frustrated actor with no prospects, decides to accept his sister’s offer to return to their hometown in bucolic upstate New York. However, he’s unaware that Maggie (Kristen Wiig) herself is barely holding it together, secretly unhappy despite her loving husband Lance (Luke Wilson).

Having had it’s premiere in the US Dramatic Competition at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, here’s your first look at director Craig Johnson’s THE SKELETON TWINS.

At first, the bond between the twins is tentative: A surprise visit from their mother (Joanna Gleason), a new-age practitioner who refuses to recognize her children’s pain, only seems to amplify just how little Maggie and Milo have recovered from the events of their childhood. Secretly Maggie and Milo separately seek out relationships that are destined to go nowhere. Maggie enjoys the flirtatious attention of her hunky Australian SCUBA instructor (Boyd Holbrook) a little too much, sabotaging her interest in having a baby with Lance.

Meanwhile, Milo meets up with his first love, Rich (Ty Burrell). After their father’s death, Milo (as an older teenager) had an affair with Rich, his high-school English teacher – a scandal that drove brother and sister apart. At first, Rich is seemingly happy with a girlfriend and grown son and resents Milo’s sudden return. Desperate to get his former lover’s attention, Milo pretends to be successful and happy, which is enough to get Rich to consider rekindling their romance.

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With painful wounds that only the other can understand, Milo and Maggie grow closer as they try to guide each other through this newest set of secrets. But as the hurt from the past catches up to the confusion in the present, their special bond is put to the test once again. They bring out not only the best in each other, but also the worst, and they are each desperate to avoid owning their own mistakes.

Eventually Milo and Maggie grow to understand that living truthfully and sharing their lives with each other, pain and all, is the only way they can move forward and reclaim the happiness they once enjoyed together.

Director’s Statement

The Skeleton Twins is about a brother and sister and their strange, messy, beautiful, funny, volatile relationship. At its core, it’s a love story: Maggie and Milo meet essentially as strangers and then discover, or, in this case, re-discover their love for each other. But what interested me most about this story were the small ways in which brothers and sisters interact, reflect each other and connect – specifically through humor.

I am very close to my sister and, even though we are wildly different people, we share an offbeat sense of humor. My sister can make me laugh in almost any situation, light or dark, and I wanted that sensibility to infuse Maggie and Milo’s relationship. More than their common history, more than the mutual feeling that they’ve screwed up their lives, more than their shared taste in 80s music, it is their ability to crack each other up, often in the face of tragic circumstances, that bonds them together.

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This bittersweet dynamic is key to the tone of the film. I wanted the The Skeleton Twins to feel like real life in all its messiness and unpredictability. That means it needed to be both funny and sad, often within the same scene. These kinds of contradictions help to humanize the characters and create a film world that is recognizable – perhaps painfully so.

Maggie and Milo are damaged, prickly, sardonic, and self-obsessed. But they are also passionate, generous, hopeful, and full of love. And, most of all, they’re funny. The moment we are about to judge them, they come through with acts of grace and humor that disarm us – and remind us not only of our own brothers and sisters, but of ourselves. We’re all struggling against life in our own ways, and if you can’t face the darkness and chuckle, you’re done for.

Winner of the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, THE SKELETON TWINS hits theaters on September 19.

http://SkeletonTwinsMovie.com
http://facebook.com/TheSkeletonTwins
https://twitter.com/skeltwins

Photos – Courtesy of Roadside Attractions

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XYZ Films’ Thriller THE INVITATION To Start Sales In Cannes; Cast Includes Luke Wilson, Zachary Quinto, Topher Grace & Johnny Galecki

XYZ Films has announced that the thriller THE INVITATION will begin principal photography in Los Angeles in the summer of 2012. Directed by Karyn Kusama (“Jennifer’s Body,” “Girlfight”), the film was scripted by Phil Hay and Matt Manfredi (“Clash of the Titans,” “R.I.P.D.”) and will star Luke Wilson (Enlightened) and an ensemble that includes Zachary Quinto (“Star Trek”), Topher Grace (“Traffic”) and Johnny Galecki (The Big Bang Theory). XYZ Films (“The Raid: Redemption”) will produce alongside Martha Griffin (“Girlfight”) and Hay and Manfredi. Foreign sales will be handled at Cannes by Celluloid Nightmares, the partnership between XYZ Films and Celluloid Dreams. XYZ Films and ICM are representing domestic sales.

On a dark night, Will (Luke Wilson) is invited to his estranged ex-wife’s dinner party. Over the course of the evening, he is gripped by mounting evidence that something insidious has taken hold of his ex-wife, and that she and her new friends have a mysterious and horrifying agenda. By the end of the night, the ramifications of what happens in this house will spread far beyond its doors.

Currently, XYZ has the hit action film THE RAID: REDEMPTION in theaters via Sony Pictures Classics. The company has also completed production on FRANKENSTEIN’S ARMY which just completed shooting in Prague.

Get Turned on By This MIDDLE MEN Trailer

Mike Fleming over at Deadline Hollywood directs us to Paramount Vantage’s newest trailer for the upcoming MIDDLE MEN. Cool way to head into August! With James Caan, it has that whole old-school CASINO vibe going for it.

Check it out:

The film’s synopsis:

In 1995, everyone had a VCR, music was sold in record stores, and the world-wide-web was a new found discovery. Businessman Jack Harris (Luke Wilson) had the perfect life – a beautiful family and a successful career fixing problem companies. Then he met Wayne Beering (Giovanni Ribisi) and Buck Dolby (Gabriel Macht), two genius but troubled men, who had invented the way adult entertainment is sold over the internet. When Jack agrees to help steer their business, he soon finds himself caught between a 23 year-old porn star and the FBI all the while becoming one of the wealthiest entrepreneurs of his time. Witness a story so outrageous, you won’t believe it’s true. A story that proves business is a lot like sex… getting in is easy, pulling out is hard.

Mallick Media presents an Oxymoron Entertainment production, in association with Blue Star Entertainment. Rated R, MIDDLE MEN will be in theaters everywhere on August 6, 2010.

“Like It” on Facebook, On MySpace, and follow on Twitter. Visit the film’s offical site here.

In Case You Missed It: ‘Idiocracy’

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There’s a reason why Mike Judge’s 2006 film, ‘Idiocracy,’ falls under the “In Case You Missed It” banner.  After the film’s production and re-shoots in 2004 and 2005, 20th Century Fox sat on the film for nearly a year.  The film had poor test screenings, and in September of 2006, the film was released in seven cities.  Even this was done with little fanfare, only a handful of posters in movie theaters and absolutely no trailers or TV spots to promote it.  Some have speculated that Fox’s disfavor with the film came from Judge’s views on corporate America.  Depictions in the film that put companies like Costco and Carl’s Jr. in less than favorable light may have caused Fox to get cold feet on the project.  The fact that it received a theatrical release of any kind seems to have stemmed from a contractual obligation.  Nonetheless, the film gained a release on DVD, and, much like Judge’s 1999 ‘Office Space,’ ‘Idiocracy’ has gained a cult following.

In the film, Luke Wilson plays Corporal Joe Bauers, the most average guy the US military has ever employed.  Due to his commonness, Joe, as well as a prostitute named Rita, played by Maya Rudolph, are chosen for a military experiment.  They are to be placed in a hibernation chamber for the term of one year.  The project is forgotten about when the officer in charge is arrested, and the military base is demolished for the sake of building a Fuddruckers.  500 years pass, and society has devolved into stupidity.  Everyone is a moron, the economy is in the toilet, and, a la ‘Wall*E,’ garbage is stacked into building-size mounds. After an avalanche of garbage dislodges Joe and Rita’s sleeping pods, they are awakened.  Now, the two find they are the most intelligent people on a planet of idiots.  With the help of an idiot native named Frito Pendejo, played by the hysterical Dax Shepherd, the two try to find a time machine, because, being in the future, they had to have perfected the art of time travel, right?  Along the way, they try to flee the police and even come across the United States government run by President Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho, played by Terry Crews.

‘Idiocracy’ is a hilarious movie, but it is also fair warning from Judge as to the state we may find ourselves before too long.  The film’s brilliant opening segments shows two, different sets of people.  A middle-class, fairly intelligent couple find themselves struggling in becoming parents while a low-class redneck continuously impregnates various, idiotic women.  Once Judge’s film jumps the 500 years to the future, we find ourselves in a precarious situation.  The film is a statement about a society of morons, but one also finds themselves struggling from laughing at the very things Judge is warning us about.  The number one movie of all time is ‘Ass,’ a 90-minute movie that just shows a man’s ass that passes gas once in awhile.  The film has won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar.  The number one television show in Judge’s world is “Ow! My Balls!,” which is 30 minutes of a guy getting racked and hit square between the legs.  The Gatorade-like beverage Brawndo: The Thirst Mutilator has virtually replaced water, because “it has electrolytes.”  All of these are humorous and inventive ways in with Mike Judge depicts his world of idiots.  It is all so ridiculous it’s funny, but you just know the days of having mile-long Costcos and fast-food restaurant vending machines are not that far off.

Judge’s film can be viewed as a stupid comedy, but it is also a very accurate satire of a possible future of our society.  Every scene is filled with referential comedy but also very realistic ideas for the ways certain things might be going.  Billboard ads put it bluntly when they say, “If you don’t smoke Tarryltons… F### You!”  Carl’s Jr.’s ad has gone from “Don’t Bother Me, I’m Eating” to “F### You, I’m Eating!”.

‘Idiocracy’ is all things in one, an extremely funny movie that delivers machine gun-speed laughs throughout and an extremely intelligent and through-provoking look at our dystopian future.  The fact that 20th Century Fox dumped the film for flimsy reasons is a travesty.  As it was, the film made just over $444,000, a fraction of its budget.  Had it been released to the masses, it could have become quite a force at the box office.  Granted, Fox, I’m sure, weren’t too keen on releasing another ‘Office Space,’ a film that made the studio very little in profit in 1999, but found its way once released to video stores.  With ‘Idiocracy,’ Judge might not have made a film as funny as ‘Office Space,’ but he definitely made a film that is every bit as satirical and biting as that.

As a side note, in 2007, Omni Consumer Products, a company that produces fictitious products for the real world, unveiled their own version of Brawndo: The Thirst Mutilator.   The drink was marketed through viral videos on YouTube, the first of which you can check out right here:

It’s got electrolytes!

‘Battle for Terra’ Trailer

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The new trailer for ‘Battle for Terra’ has been released.   We bring you this trailer right now:

All in all, it looks like it could be a pretty cool space adventure.   However, I just caught the trailer for ‘9’ this past weekend, and that film is going to be the “must-see” animated film this year.

‘Battle for Terra’ comes out on May 1st and features the voices of Evan Rachel Wood, Brian Cox, Luke Wilson, David Cross, Justin Long, Amanda Peet, Dennis Quaid, Chris Evans, James Garner, Rosanna Arquette and Chad Allen.

Source: Trailer Addict

Win ‘Henry Poole is Here’ on DVD

We are giving away a couple copies of ‘Henry Poole is Here’ on DVD, all you have to do is leave a comment below and tell us what day this movie is coming out! (Hint, the answer is on this page)

Henry Poole is Here stars  Luke Wilson, Academy Award ® nominee Adriana Barraza, and Radha Mitchell star in a modern day fable about the unexpected wonders of the everyday from director Mark Pellington. Henry Poole is Here tells the funny, poignant and uplifting story of a disillusioned man who attempts to hide from life in a rundown suburban tract home only to discover he cannot escape the forces of hope. Despite his desire for solitude, Henry can’t help noticing Dawn (Radha Mitchell), the beautiful young divorcà ©e next door and her daughter Millie (Lily), an eight-year-old amateur spy who hasn’t spoken a word since her parents’ break-up. But as news of the apparition spreads throughout the neighborhood and his feelings for Dawn grow, Henry realizes his plan to live out his days in quiet desperation is going to be much harder than he ever imagined.
The DVD comes out on January 20th 2009, which also happens to be my birthday (you can buy me stuff from my WISHLIST here). This movie was really good, and I am stoked to see it again on DVD.

Review: ‘Henry Poole is Here’

Ram Man:

What would you do if the doctor told you “I’m sorry but you have an incurable disease and you are going to die.”? If you Henry Poole you are going to shut down, return to your childhood home and try a little self euthanasia..do all the bad things that would supposedly kill you before the disease can.

Luke Wilson (Old School, A Family Stone) is Henry Poole. Following a routine physical, Henry is told his days are numbered. So he quits his job and moves back to the last place he was really happy… his childhood neighborhood. He wasn’t able to but his old house (they people wouldn’t sell) , but did manage to get a fixer upper down the street for $100,000 more than its worth. The neighborhood is right out of a TV set, I expected Mr Rogers to jump out from behind a bush. Adriana Barraza gives an astounding performance as Esperanza the local busy-body next door. She was shagging the guy who previously owned the house (she found him dead on the kitchen floor) and comes over tamales in hand to welcome Henry to the Neighborhood. Poole who is on a diet of Krispy Kreme doughnuts, pizza,champagne and vodka just wants to be left alone to die. He slips in “I’m not going to be here long” to everyone he meets. Esperanza makes a riveting discovery as she leaves Henry’s house. The face of GOD is appearing on the terrible stucco job on the side of Henry’s house. Henry, who has lost his faith in everyone and everything tells Esperanza she is nuts and not to make a big deal out of it. Bring on the Bible Brigade! George Lopez, who turns in a wonderful cameo as Father Salizar, comes to test the validity of the “miracle”.

Like the USA Today, Esperanza get the word out to the neighborhood so people begin to appear at his back door. Poole next makes the acquaintance of Millie (Morgan Lilly) who spends her days recording people conversations and like Henry avoiding personal contact if she can. Millie daughter of Dawn (Radha Mitchell) next door, hasn’t spoken a word in almost a year since her dad left them. Millie makes her way to the spot on the wall, touches it and SPEAKS! This all Esperanza needs, now Henry’s back yard is standing room only. This sends Henry back to the store only this time for bleach not vodka. Rachel Seiferth is wonderful as Patience the practically Blind grocery checker that continuously tries to bring Poole out of his depression. She asks Henry “Isn’t it better to feel sad than not to fell anything at all?” Let me say YES! She also adds “I hope your not mixing with this (Bleach)!” Henry begins to try to wipe out the Holy smudge and only makes it more clear and now hes angered the oh mighty.. tears of blood are rolling down the wall.

Patience is the next parishioner to show up at Henry’s backyard cathedral. She touches the wall and falls to her knees and yells “I can See!!!!” The touch of God’s stucco has given the girl with the coke bottle glasses 20/20. This is far too much for Henry to handle. His blossoming romance with Dawn and his own incurable fate mixed with the smudge from heaven send Henry into a rage. Poole takes a sledge hammer to God and God brings down the house… on Henry.

Director Mark Pellington and Writer Albert Torres team up to tell this wonderful story of faith and hope in a way not to preach to the audience but to entertain us. Pellington, who identifies with Poole’s character, having lost his wife at the age of 42 injects some of his grief into the story. Henry Poole is a fable set in modern times to expain the unexpected wonders in the world around us. The acting is great. The only criticism I have is it is very slow moving but worth your time. Henry Poole is here and you should be there… watching… so go… go on… catch Henry before the title reads Henry Poole was here!

(3.5 out of 5 angels)

Michelle:

What do you do when your doctor’s prognosis is grim and you’re given only a short time to live? If you’re Henry Poole (Luke Wilson), you try to return to the home of your childhood – or at least one down the street. But in ‘Henry Poole Is Here,’ one really can’t go home again. Sadly, when Poole realizes he can’t recapture the brief happiness of his youth, he sets out to die quietly in his newly bought “prison.” That is, til well-meaning neighbors (Adriana Barraza and Radha Mitchell) filled with faith and hope, a priest (George Lopez), along with a lofty apparition on his house, make Henry’s solitude and redemption more than he bargained for.

While based on director Mark Pellington’s own personal loss, ‘Henry Poole Is Here’ feels like a present day O. Henry story. With its ordinary people, coincidental plot, and surprise twist, ‘Poole’ ironically has a typical O. Henry ending.

(3 out of 5 stars)

Kat:

When Henry Poole (Luke Wilson) gets the news that he’s contracted an unnamed but rare disease, his response is to quit his job and return to the Southern California suburb where he was raised. He tries to buy the house he grew up in but alas, it’s not for sale, even though he’s willing to offer a good price. “They live there,† his realtor (Cheryl Hines) explains with a strained smile, “it’s their home.† Resigned to his fate, Henry stocks up on booze and frozen pizzas and prepares to die. Only his pesky neighbors won’t leave him in peace.

First Esperanza (Adriana Barraza) shows up bearing tamales and tales of the house’s former owner, who was her boyfriend. Then the little mute girl next door (Morgan Lily) insists on tape recording all his conversations—a habit that leads to a pivotal plot twist later on. Even the check-out girl at the local supermarket (Rachel Seiferth) urges him to spill his sad and angry thoughts and is taken aback when he finds the suggestion intrusive.

When Esperanza discovers what she believes to be the image of Christ in a water-stained section of stucco on Henry’s house, a battle of wills begins with Henry on one side and the rest of the world, including Esperanza’s priest (George Lopez in a warm and understated performance) on the other.

Somewhere beneath the overwrought soundtrack and the overwhelming overkill of the movie’s message, there’s an affecting story about faith and hope and love that’s trying to come out. In fact, there are a couple of moments where you can see what this movie could have been, like a scene where Henry good-naturedly supervises a group of Esperanza’s friends who have come to pray at his wall. There’s an easy-going vibe to the scene that almost feels improvised and we never like Henry and Esperanza more than we do in that moment.

But for every scene like that, there are a dozen that are so manufactured and mechanical that they bury the emotion. Henry frets that it’s unfair for him to start a romance with single mother Dawn (Radha Mitchell) who assures him it’s fine, apparently forgetting that her child has such severe abandonment issues that she went mute when her father left.

Albert Torres’ script is sincere but simplistic, with its themes pounded home in an unsubtle manner that underlines the movie’s “big moments† as if shining a light on them.

The audience will be able to tell when one of those scenes is coming because that over-the-top soundtrack is cranked up to 11 and all the actors put on really serious faces. Wilson gives a somewhat monotone performance here, although there are times when he’s really present and those times register strongly. His discomfort at being hugged, for instance, tells us much more about his character than his frequent cranky outbursts.

Director Mark Pellington (The Mothman Prophecies) has a very heavy hand here, particularly with certain images he repeats over and over. There’s a behind-the-stain† shot of some miracle blood that may not be able to turn water into wine but that can apparently turn stone into glass. It’s distracting. Then there are the repeated shots of a particular group of clouds. We’re not certain if it’s meant to be a leitmotif or the filmmakers just didn’t have the coverage they needed to cut the sequence together.

Pellington also micro-manages his actresses, and a few of the choices he makes seem ill-conceived. Barraza’s Esperanza is all exaggerated facial expressions and over-emphatic gestures. Anyone who saw her in Babel will be surprised to see how broad her performance is here. Cheryl Hines has apparently been encouraged to channel her inner Kathy Lee Gifford and her perkilicious performance gives the movie an atonal feeling from the get-go.

Mitchell isn’t over-directed, but she’s bland. Her lovely, luminous eyes practically glow in the first glimpse we get of her, but after awhile, she seems to be posing more than acting and her poses have that slightly pained look Princess Diana always seemed to have in official photographs.

Character-driven dramas like Henry Poole is Here are becoming endangered species, so it’s a shame that this one failed to live up to its potential.

Travis:

I like Luke Wilson. I always have, ever since I first saw ‘Bottle Rockets’. No one would argue he’s the world’s greatest actor, but he does have a certain realism and subtle innocent, yet worldly charm about his acting style. He tends to play the “everyman” type of characters and does convincingly well, as he does in director Mark Pellington’s ‘Henry Poole is Here’.

I’m not going to sugar coat this review… I just can’t. The movie deserves better than that. It’s not the greatest film of the year and it’s not even the most original. In fact, the story is kind of predictable. However, its the brilliantly shot and structured visual acuity from an experienced music video director combined with a fabulous soundtrack and beautifully understated performances that give this film it’s appeal. ‘Henry Poole’ is a spiritual film, not a religious film. It’s a satisfying journey into the inner working of belief and hope and the powers these human experiences have over us, both positive and negative. It’s obvious that this was a personal film, especially if you’re aware of the personal tragedy that Pellington went through prior to making this movie, which was born of that unfortunate experience that inspired him to make a more meaningful film.

“Henry Poole’ moves at a slowly addictive pace, pulling you in little by little as Henry Poole’s character is developed further and further. The mystery lies not within the details of Henry Poole’s past, but within the intricate details of his present life as he lives it one moment at a time. The supporting characters were delightfully well-played, offering color and texture without interfering with the complex emotions that Wilson is able to pull off so well.

Every character in the film shines, from Poole’s nosey neighbor Esperanza to the attractive single mother Dawn (Radha Mitchell) and her adorable daughter Milly. Personally, my favorite supporting performance in the film is by Rachel Seiferth as Patience, a grocery clerk with hopelessly poor eyesight and extreme Coke-bottle glasses who gets Henry Poole probably better than anyone else. Cheryl Hines (Curb Your Enthusiasm) also makes a brief, but hilarious cameo as the Poole’s real estate agent at the beginning of the film. When so many movies feel the need to go over the top to tell a truly touching story of the human experience, ‘Henry Poole’ finds it’s muse within a miraculously water-stained stucco house.

(3.5 water stains out of 5)

[rating: 3.5/5]