Lists

Picture of a movie: Blue Valentine
Picture of a movie: Under the Silver Lake
Picture of a movie: Lost in Translation
Picture of a movie: Zoolander
Picture of a movie: Frances Ha
Picture of a movie: Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Picture of a movie: The Shape of Water
Picture of a movie: Half Nelson
Picture of a movie: Me and You and Everyone We Know
Picture of a movie: Submarine
Picture of a movie: The Florida Project
Picture of a movie: The Danish Girl
Picture of a movie: The Virgin Suicides
Picture of a movie: American Beauty
Picture of a movie: Adaptation.
Picture of a movie: Being John Malkovich

73 Movies, 17 Shows

This Kind Of Vibes

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Dark Academy. Brown leafs on the sidewalk. Salty tears. Sweet Smile. Aching heart. Black sheeps. Being Comfortably numb. Teenage days confusion. Escapism, in a good way.

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Picture of a movie: Synecdoche, New York
movies

Synecdoche, New York

2009
Theater director Caden Cotard is mounting a new play. Fresh off of a successful production of Death of a Salesman, he has traded in the suburban blue-hairs and regional theater of Schenectady for the cultured audiences and bright footlights of Broadway. Armed with a MacArthur grant and determined to create a piece of brutal realism and honesty, something into which he can put his whole self, he gathers an ensemble cast into a warehouse in Manhattan's theater district. He directs them in a celebration of the mundane, instructing each to live out their constructed lives in a small mock-up of the city outside. As the city inside the warehouse grows, Caden's own life veers wildly off the tracks. The shadow of his ex-wife Adele, a celebrated painter who left him years ago for Germany's art scene, sneers at him from every corner. Somewhere in Berlin, his daughter Olive is growing up under the questionable guidance of Adele's friend, Maria. He's helplessly driving his marriage to actress Claire into the ground. Sammy Barnathan, the actor Caden has hired to play himself within the play, is a bit too perfect for the part, and is making it difficult for Caden to revive his relationship with the alluringly candid Hazel. Meanwhile, his therapist, Madeline Gravis, is better at plugging her best-seller than she is at counselling him. His second daughter, Ariel, is disabled. And a mysterious condition is systematically shutting down each of his autonomic functions, one by one. As the years rapidly pass, Caden buries himself deeper into his masterpiece. Populating the cast and crew with doppelgangers, he steadily blurs the line between the world of the play and that of his own deteriorating reality. As he pushes the limits of his relationships, both personally and professionally, a change in creative direction arrives in Millicent Weems, a celebrated theater actress who may offer Caden the break he needs.