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Death of a Ladies' Man

2020

Action / Comedy / Drama / Music / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Jessica Paré Photo
Jessica Paré as Charlotte
Brian Gleeson Photo
Brian Gleeson as Ben O'Shea
Gabriel Byrne Photo
Gabriel Byrne as Samuel O'Shea
Carolina Bartczak Photo
Carolina Bartczak as Linda O'Shea
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
925.06 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S 1 / 1
1.86 GB
1920*800
English 5.1
NR
24 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by bloovee8 / 10

Leonard Cohen inspiration - but it's not like Mamma Mia

Death of a Ladies' Man (dir. Matt Bissonnette, cert 15) isn't getting a theatrical release in the UK, only streaming. It takes its inspiration from Leonard Cohen songs.

Sam (Patrick Byrne) is a Literature professor in Quebec, his second marriage breaking up, his son Layton (Antoine Olivier Pilon) coming out as gay, and he's hallucinating about his dead father (Brian Gleeson) - "a terrible ghost". When the hallucinations affect the day job, the doctor initially discounts a brain tumour - his years of hard drinking would explain a lot - but a scan reveals an inoperable tumour that could affect memory, hearing, vision and motion ("That's a relief; I hardly ever use any of that stuff").

His daughter Josée (Karelle Tremblay),18, a performance artist, has new boyfriend Chad (Raphael Grosz-Harvey) leading her into bad ways with drugs. That will end badly.

The second act has him "reflecting on my life and imminent death" by visiting his childhood home in Galway, still envisioning and conversing with his dead father. The encounter at the local grocery store with Charlotte (Jessica Paré),a French-Canadian woman reading Leonard Cohen's poetry, prompts a "small world" moment, leading quickly into too, too solid flesh moments (the script references Shakespeare as well as Cohen). The shot of a Cohen lookalike as a Buddhist monk miming to Why Don't You Try is definitely "trippy", and the appearance of Charlotte's former boyfriend adds a violent twist to the story.

Act 3 has Sam back in Canada at Alcoholics Anonymous, and dealing with Josée's drug addiction.

The licence that hallucinations can give to a script has the AA group dancing to Did I Ever Love You? (a late Cohen mash of his ever-raspier voice suddenly transformed into country music). Then comes a Lazarus gag, and Death (with scythe) accompanying Sam on a walk with an old friend, discussing Sam's new book recounting his experiences.

The book launch - with his dead dad and others from his hallucinations in the audience - is a triumph, but rudely interrupted by a claim of plagiarism, and a rather more abrupt encounter with death than foreseen. When the number of new films is still quite low, for this not to get a theatrical release even on the arthouse circuit seems strange.

Reviewed by CtlAltDel7 / 10

Quirky

What a quirky film. Byrne does a great job in the lead but his 'father' steals most of the scenes they're in. It is patchy in parts and certainly changes speed and tone when he goes back to Ireland. Not altogether satisfying you can't help but feel it couldn't been better.

Reviewed by ks-605004 / 10

Good execution

I believe when life come to the end, illusion comes up is very normal. This movie just someone real experience and that's life.

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