Tumbledown (2015)
Comedy, Music, Romance | 5 February 2016 (USA)
A young woman struggles to move on with her life after the death of her husband, an acclaimed folk singer, when a brash New York writer forces her to confront her loss and the ambiguous circumstances of his death.
Director:
Sean MewshawWriters:
Sean Mewshaw (story), Desiree Van Til (screenplay) |Stars:
Rebecca Hall, Joe Manganiello, Dianna Agron |Storyline
Hannah (Hall) is beginning to move on with her life after the death of her husband, an acclaimed musician and the subject of her latest biography, when she meets Andrew (Sudeikis), a brash writer from New York, who has a different take on her husband's life - and death. The unlikely pair must collaborate to put together the famous singer's story and begin to write the next chapter of their lives. Written by Anonymous
Details
Country:
USA | CanadaLanguage:
EnglishRelease Date:
5 February 2016 (USA) See more »Also Known As:
Nie ma mowy! See more »Filming Locations:
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada See more »Company Credits
Production Co:
Echo Films, Echo Films, Bron StudiosTechnical Specs
Runtime:
Color:
ColorMovie Reviews
Gorgeous, hilarious, and well-written film
If you haven't seen Tumbledown yet, you are in for a treat. Rebecca Hall plays the widow of Hunter Miles, a fictional singer with a cult following. She has stacked enough wood for years of a comfortable widowhood--living among her husband's instruments and keepsakes in the lakeside cabin in Maine that they shared. She's forced from being a hermit by the brash academic (played by Jason Sudeikis) who appears on his European motorcycle to dig up biographical details on Hunter for his PhD dissertation. But Hunter's widow turns out to be more fascinating than the memory of Sudeikis' musical hero. And the rest is chemistry. We get to watch Jason Sudeikis and Rebecca Hall on a date at the town dump, at a family Easter gone wrong, and standing on a sheet of frozen ice surrounded by the crazy whale sounds of a thawing lake in the Maine woods. The rapport between Rebecca Hall and Jason Sudeikis is riveting. Their banter is smart and funny. And Damien Jurado's haunting tunes give the movie a depth that reverberates for days to come. The film is gorgeous, moving and entertaining.
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