
Release Date : May 17, 2013 Limited
Mpaa Rating : R Genre :ComedyFrances (Greta Gerwig) lives in New York, but she doesn't really have an apartment. Frances is an apprentice for a dance company, but shes not really a dancer. Frances has a best friend named Sophie, but they aren't really speaking anymore. Frances throws herself headlong into her dreams, even as their possible reality dwindles. Frances wants so much more than she has but lives her life with unaccountable joy and lightness. FRANCES HA is a modern comic fable that explores New York, friendship, class, ambition, failure, and redemption. (c) IFC Films
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Actors For Frances Ha
Greta Gerwig,Adam Driver,Grace Gummer,Mickey Sumner,Patrick Heusinger,Michael ZegenGenres Frances Ha : Comedy
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Frances Ha
User Ranting Movie Frances Ha : 3.8User Percentage For Frances Ha : 80 %
User Count Like for Frances Ha : 7,707
All Critics Ranting For Frances Ha : 7.9
All Critics Count For Frances Ha : 108
All Critics Percentage For Frances Ha : 92 %
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Special Review For Movie Frances Ha
In your twenties you decide on the final version of you. Sophie is working on it; Frances is stuck in her crazy, clueless, can't-pay-the-rent stage.Cath Clarke-Time Out
It's a tribute to Gerwig's performance, somehow both clumsy and elegant, that she wins us over despite ourselves, that we come to appreciate her aimlessness in a goal-oriented society ...
Rick Groen-Globe and Mail
This is an odd film (creepier than it knows), and even if you feel the atmospheric company of Dunham-ism, with a little of Whit Stillman, Henry Jaglom, and Woody Allen, the core influence on Noah Baumbach's film is fifty years older or more.
David Thomson-The New Republic
Baumbach usually builds his films around difficult protagonists, but Frances is entirely endearing, at once silly and deep, hopeless and promising.
Mick LaSalle-Hearst Newspapers
The dialogue and editing are zippy and generally charming, combining with the tart observations of 20-something culture to create a nice frisson.
Ben Sachs-Chicago Reader
A black-and-white salute to the French New Wave (the score is borrowed from Georges Delerue, composer of many a Truffaut and Godard film) that manages to be very much of this moment ...
Steven Rea-Philadelphia Inquirer
The story becomes chaotic and disjointed, but that's the point: Frances is tumbling towards her 30s with no sense of direction and this is where Gerwig excels, deftly pulling you along on a bumpy ride.
Stella Papamichael-Digital Spy
Baumbach and Gerwig have co-written a film about the point when spontaneous, giddy arrested adolescence ceases to be endearing and threatens to be annoying.
Siobhan Synnot-Scotsman
Anchored by a charming performance from Greta Gerwig, it's as light and breezy as a walk in Central Park, and just as refreshing.
David Hughes-Empire Magazine
A joyous portrait of an unformed personality that should strike chords of recognition in all who watch it.
Neil Smith-Total Film
Frances Ha could be THE post-college-angst comedy of the '10s. This is what happens when Mumblecore grows up and turns into a real movie.
Eric D. Snider-Movies.com
Agreeable low-budget modern-day urban comedy.
Dennis Schwartz-Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Frances Ha is a refreshingly contemporary film, exploring 20-something hipster ennui with accuracy, empathy and humour.
T'Cha Dunlevy-Montreal Gazette
As long as you remember to laugh, Frances Ha is a tolerable experience. Forget the "ha ha" and Frances Ha is beyond unbearable. I found this an odd and often frustrating truth, but it's what makes Noah Baumbach's new movie a success.
Katherine Monk-Canada.com
Gerwig keeps you on side and rooting for Frances to get her act together in what becomes an affectionate salute to messy lives, an endearing underachiever and a New York state of mind.
Allan Hunter-The List
Don't be fooled by Frances with all her feigned insecurity and branding of herself as "undateable" and predicting she'll be a lonely spinster. She's a psychopath.
Ben Rawson-Jones-Digital Spy
Gerwig's deft screwball timing turns every disaster into a grace note. This may be a comedy of awkwardness, but rather than curl, your toes will tap.
Jamie Dunn-The Skinny
A refreshing amount of buoyancy to dance and charm its way through Quarter-Life Crisis territory. One of the best performances of Greta Gerwig's career to date
Cameron Williams-The Popcorn Junkie
Frances Ha is a sympathetic but not uncritical depiction of a girl's gradual evolution into a woman; one that never condescends by forcing her to abandon all her quirks and impish qualities in the final act... An absolute delight, this is.
Simon Miraudo-Quickflix
Indie darling Gerwig has a great deal to do with the picture's success: she's disarmingly likable...
Leonard Maltin-Leonard Maltin's Picks
There's a level of audacity beneath the lightweight whimsy in this unassuming low-budget comedy.
Todd Jorgenson-Cinemalogue.com
"Frances Ha makes a star out of Gerwig, and she's the kind of star we need: a goofy one we can feel tender about but never underestimate."
Richard von Busack-MetroActive
'I can't account for my own bruises,' Frances says, as if she were a clumsy kid with an adult's vocabulary. Does the remark refer to more than the abrasions on her skin?
John Beifuss-Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
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Movie Overview For Frances Ha
Shot in black and white, Frances Ha is about an aspiring dancer (co-writer Greta Gerwig) who moves to New York City and becomes caught up in a whirlwind of flighty fair-weather friends, diminishing fortunes and career setbacks. From director Noah Baumbach (Margot at the Wedding, Greenberg).
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