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Jake Davis, a Pulitzer-winning novelist, struggles to raise his 5-year-old daughter, Katie, after his wife dies in a car accident. As the narrative weaves back and forth between the 1980s and present day, 30-year-old Katie battles her own demons that stemmed from her troubled childhood. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (4)

kaylin 

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English This film got me. It was partly because Russell Crowe was in the main role, who also played a writer, but simply because the story managed to reach me. I didn't like the romance and its ending that much, but the film managed to evoke emotions in me and I didn't feel like I was being manipulated. So, for me, it was very well done. ()

DaViD´82 

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English A tearful Hallmark-type melodrama where only excellent cast and the fact that the movie is not forced to much make the movie bearable. Which, of course, doesn't mean that emotions are not in the spotlight, because they are, and a lot. However, even if being completely cynical I cannot say that I don´t care. Simply because I cared. ()

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Malarkey 

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English A strangely narrated movie that focuses on two timelines of one atypical father-and-daughter relationship. One timeline is mostly about Russell Crowe as the dad, the other one is mostly based in the present and around his daughter portrayed by Amanda Seyfried. I must say that I like Russell’s story better, even though Amanda’s was nice to watch. Despite the fact that the entire story of this family relationship is getting closer and closer to an epic unravelling just as the viewer expects from the very beginning, it didn’t manage to captivate me enough for me to enjoy it to the fullest. I just didn’t get their relationship. The dad was going to extremes as well as the daughter. I couldn’t relate to it and the only thing I got from it was the joy of seeing Russell and Amanda in a movie again. ()

Othello 

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English I needed to cut my toenails really badly and this whiny garbage came like a sign. It's not a total insult, but I couldn't figure out what it was about. For real. Despite that, though, many of the individual elements were quite inspiring. For example, who ever told Aaron Paul that he could act? Why does twenty-five years older Diane Kruger actually look twenty-five years younger? Where did Amanda Seyfried get Homer's makeup shotgun? Why is Shane Hurtbutt's camera exhibiting in this spectacularly down-to-earth picture? Questions, so many questions... ()

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