Release Date The Spectacular Now Aug 2, 2013 Limited
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Actors For The Spectacular Now
Miles Teller,Shailene Woodley,Brie Larson,Mary Elizabeth Winstead,Jennifer Jason Leigh,Kyle Chandler,Andre Royo,Dayo Okeniyi,Bob OdenkirkGenres The Spectacular Now : Drama,Romance,Comedy
Visitor Ranting & Critics For The Spectacular Now
User Ranting The Spectacular Now : 4User Percentage For The Spectacular Now : 83 %
User Count Like for The Spectacular Now : 6,138
All Critics Ranting For The Spectacular Now : 7.8
All Critics Count For The Spectacular Now : 60
All Critics Percentage For The Spectacular Now : 88 %
If You Like this movie you can streaming The Spectacular Now movie without downloading HERE
Movie Overview For The Spectacular Now
Sutter Keely lives in the now. Itâs a good place for him. A high school senior, charming and self-possessed, heâs the life of the party, loves his job at a menâs clothing store, and has no plans for the future. A budding alcoholic, heâs never far from his supersized, whisky-fortified 7UP cup. But after being dumped by his girlfriend, Sutter gets drunk and wakes up on a lawn with Aimee Finicky hovering over him. Not a member of the cool crowd, sheâs different: the ânice girlâ who reads science fiction and doesnât have a boyfriend. She does have dreams, while Sutter lives in a world of impressive self-delusion. And yet theyâre drawn to each other.TagLine The Spectacular Now
Trailer For The Spectacular Now
Review For The Spectacular Now
James Ponsoldt, who directed from a script by Michael H. Weber and Scott Neustadter, is a bit too glib to do justice to this material, but the young actors, especially Woodley, are quite fine.Peter Rainer-Christian Science Monitor
The two leads, Miles Teller's Sutter Keely and Shailene Woodley's Aimee Finicky are so well drawn and believably portrayed that it's impossible not to accept them as real.
James Berardinelli-ReelViews
Here is a lovely film about two high school seniors who look, speak and feel like real 18-year-old middle-American human beings. Do you have any idea how rare that is?
Roger Ebert-RogerEbert.com
The fast-talking but increasingly insufferable Teller ... displays little ability to modulate his performance as the movie gradually turns darker and darker ...
Kyle Smith-New York Post
Remarkable for the ease with which it positions itself outside this arena of aggressively stylized self-differentiation.
Dana Stevens-Slate
A wryly funny, compassionate and wise portrait of teens on the cusp of adulthood.
Claudia Puig-USA Today
...a remarkably precise portrait of a certain sort of high schooler.
Josh Larsen-LarsenOnFilm
Director James Ponsoldt has adapted Tim Tharp's coming-of-age novel with heartfelt sincerity, but the movie lacks a cutting bite to push it past innocuous teenage drama to a truly deep portrait of adolescence.
Jeremy Mathews-Paste Magazine
Captures the life lessons that spring up unexpectedly when blind confidence dictates you've got life all figured out
Cameron Williams-The Popcorn Junkie
The film eventually begins to work against itself and erodes the goodwill that it had earned.
Nathan Southern-TV Guide's Movie Guide
How these characters affect each other's decisions, and ultimate destiny, is at the heart of Neustadter and Weber's screenplay, brought to life with admirable honesty and restraint by James Ponsoldt...
Leonard Maltin-Leonard Maltin's Picks
...so near-perfectly pitched, it transcends its genre.
Kurt Loder-Reason Online
...another soulful story about adolescents careering messily into first loves.
Chris Barsanti-PopMatters
The blossoming-love emotions ... aren't all that different from the ones you might encounter in a Nicholas Sparks movie, yet the intimacy between Sutter and Aimee feels real.
Craig Seligman-Bloomberg News
Poignant teen drama doesn't shy away from alcohol or sex.
Sandie Angulo Chen-Common Sense Media
The word "alcoholic" is never uttered in this movie, but more and more, you see that's the crutch.
Alonso Duralde-What the Flick?!
The sojourn into John Hughes territory distracts from the film's real story, which centers on a young alcoholic hurtling toward the abyss.
Robert Levin-amNewYork
Everything about this film is special, director James Ponsoldt ("Smashed") pitching the material so acutely that he's able to bring us to the brink of tragedy and pull back into an ending full of open-hearted hope.
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews
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