Rivetting confessional fish-bowl one-house production, wonderfully delineated characters (you'll love to hate 'he', but ... well, it's McAvoy, and he'll help you accept the lines that come out of his mouth, even if you disagree with 'him'). Quick-shifting dynamics (never boring: I'm amazed at all the reviews who say so: duh, it's lockdown, perhaps you're not able to relate to these characters and the situation they're in, so jog on) as the relationships react to the emergency outside, what's happening to their family and friends outside, and how this changes them - then, how the characters grow, change, despair, and attempt to cope. The child is very subtly played: the adults are trying to cope, but this means a lot of self-care, and there's not a lot of reserves left to then look after another person.
Lots of empathy and self-examination, and that sense of 'much of this could have been mitigated by effective leadership' vs 'I wish I was brave enough to tell you how much I care'. Highly recommended. Thank you to all involved in making this. When we're all a bit more ready to reflect on what's been eroding our society for the last two years, this film will help us come to terms with what just happened.
Together
2021
Comedy / Drama / Romance
Together
2021
Comedy / Drama / Romance
Plot summary
This is the story of a family, like so many, who found a way to survive--together. It is the hilarious and heartbreaking story of a husband and wife who are forced to re-evaluate themselves and their relationship through the reality of lockdown.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEB 2160p.WEBMovie Reviews
Like brilliant theatre
The Time Capsule
What a great idea to document a time in our lives through fiction but in real time.
I laughed and cried throughout the whole thing. It showed so much of the everyday lives of all of living through this pandemic and touched on so many issues. Absolutely gorgeous acting and very funny. Would make a great play.
This is what excellent acting looks like
James McAvoy and Sharon Horgan are brilliant in this exploration of lockdown dynamics. Writer Dennis Kelly uses the camera, and therefore the audience, as a kind of silent therapist for the characters, a married couple who may be are or may be not at the end of their relationship. There are some bravura solos and duets, carefully charted by director Stephen Daldry. The whole thing is both highly artificial and entirely natural, a real triumph for all concerned. I had a couple of reservations about one of Horgan's monologues -- the writing, not the performing -- in that it felt a bit more like a newspaper column than a speech, but that apart I was grateful for the sheer quality of what I was watching. It's a relief to be treated as an adult.