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At the Movies: November 13

Love The Coopers, My All American, By The Sea

Posted November 13, 2015

It’s the week before Thanksgiving, and the powers in Hollywood have decided to hold on to the good stuff until the main event. So bad news: this week is meh, with a holiday movie (Yes, already!) and a football movie (Incomplete pass).

Love the Coopers

With an all-star ensemble cast starring Diane Keaton, John Goodman, Amanda Seyfried, Olivia Wilde, Ed Helms, and Marisa Tomei, Love the Coopers is about a wacky, crazy family coming together for the holidays. What could possibly go wrong? Well, everything.

Perfect For: You liked The Family Stone? You like watching other family’s dysfunction on the big screen?

What the Critics Say: Let’s peruse a sampling of headlines: “Love the Coopers: You Won’t.” “Love the Coopers: a So-So Holiday Comedy.” “Love the Coopers Gets Just About Everything Wrong.” Yikes. Variety calls it: “An overstuffed turkey about shedding lies and embracing who you are and how you feel.” The others aren’t any kinder.

Our Take: Probably no.

My All American

This saccharine-sweet, based-on-a-true-story tale stars dreamy Finn Wittrock as Freddie Steinmark, a high school-turned-college football player who, despite being too small for the big leagues, gets a scholarship at UT Austin. While there, he gets a potentially devastating injury but comes back just in time for the championship to save the day. Do we need to mention that there is also a girl and a sweet romance?

Perfect For: Perhaps fans of Friday Night Lights who are in mourning and need another football flick to get them through the winter.

What the Critics Say: Too predictable by half. Writes the Los Angeles Times: “Strict adherence to the playbook may work in sports, but ‘My All American’ shows the pitfalls of that approach with movies.” Writes the San Francisco Chronicle: “The relentless lack of human flaw on screen effects (sic) the plausibility of the whole production. ‘My All-American’ is escapist to a fault.”

Our Take: Pass.

By The Sea

Angelina Jolie and Brat Pitt star in Jolie’s passion project –which she wrote, in addition to directing and starring in. They star as a married couple living seaside in France during the ‘70s and encounter young honeymooners who shed light on their broken relationship.

Perfect For: People who like French movies without the French.

What the Critics Say: Pretty looking but empty. Writes The Washington Post: "By the Sea" is dazzlingly gorgeous, as are its stars. But peeling back layer upon layer of exquisite ennui reveals nothing but emptiness, sprinkled with stilted sentiments.” And says Entertainment Weekly: “Misery doesn't just love good-looking company; it needs an emotional center and a satisfying narrative arc, too.”

Our Take: Pretty, depressed people aren’t more interesting than regular, depressed people.

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