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Crazy Eyes
Directed by
Adam Sherman
Not Rated
2012
1h 35m
Drama
,
Comedy
,
and more
4.0
25%
21%
Add to Watchlist
Zach is guy for whom the party never ends. But when he meets the girl he nicknames "Crazy Eyes," the inability to have her, combined with family matters, are signs that his idle life might be due for a change.
More
Where to Watch Crazy Eyes
Hoopla
Free
Kanopy
Free
Tubi TV
Free
+2 more
Cast of Crazy Eyes
Lukas Haas
Zach
Madeline Zima
Rebecca
Jake Busey
Dan Drake
Tania Raymonde
Autumn
Ray Wise
Zach's Father
Valerie Mahaffey
Zach's Mother
Ned Bellamy
Bob
Reese Hartwig
Teen at Funeral
Shaun O'Hagan
Cop
Crazy Eyes Ratings & Reviews
New York Daily News
Joe Neumaier
This slovenly, self-indulgent riff on Charles Bukowski-like fringe-livers has all of the naked harshness of Bukowski with none of the poetry.
New York Times
Stephen Holden
Yes, it feels true. But why bother?
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
The resulting film has the integrity and the ugliness of the truth. It's not true because it's ugly; no, it's ugly because it's true.
Los Angeles Times
Robert Abele
One of those exercises in masculine self-pity and glib misogyny that frustrates because of its shortsightedness.
AV Club
Sam Adams
Sherman's feature turns out to be enamored of the kind of reality that gets left out of movies not because it's provocative or controversial, but because it isn't particularly interesting.
New York Post
Sara Stewart
There's no colorful Boschian absurdism here, only soulless banter and projectile vomit.
Entertainment Weekly
Lisa Schwarzbaum
An appreciation that the pain is personal doesn't compensate for the picture's self-absorbed need to alienate.
ColeSmithey.com
Cole Smithey
[VIDEO ESSAY] Matching the cold, callused, cynicism of Bret Easton Ellis's LA Gen-X "Less Than Zero," "Crazy Eyes" is too much in love with its spoiled brat protagonist. It is still a guilty pleasure in the theater of cruelty.
Movieline
Alison Willmore
The film seems to aim for a gritty and real depiction of a drug- and drink-fueled not-quite romance, but it's in fact just your worst fears about the kinds of people who populate L.A. brought to ugly, misogynistic and sometimes maudlin life.
myfilmblog
Kam Williams
Hedonistic playboy tries Platonic relationship in offbeat romantic romp.
Slant Magazine
Andrew Schenker
While the male characters are certainly not presented as models of enlightened behavior, their antics and crises are indulged in a manner not extended to their female counterparts.
Village Voice
Nick Pinkerton
The exuberant editing and puke-into-the-camera edginess indicate a film more interested in boasting of hell-raising than in exorcising it.
Variety
Peter Debruge
These two non-lovers have real chemistry, and it's hard not to be intoxicated by the strange cocktail of watching them together, even as the story appears to be going nowhere.
Film School Rejects
Kate Erbland
Crazy Eyes feels a bit like a more light-hearted Leaving Las Vegas or a more energetic Somewhere -- comparisons that are meant as compliments.
Behind The Lens
Debbie Lynn Elias
Crazy Eyes is one sad, and crazy, look at one man's life.
Three Imaginary Girls
Amie Simon
Bottom line: everyone is so shallow and surface-y, that you just. can't. care. Even his kid is kind of a horrible (little) person, for chrissakes. It just made me sad.
East Bay Express
Kelly Vance
A rare example of the "decadent LA" movie, once thought extinct.
Hollywood & Fine
Marshall Fine
A hard sell unless you've got an appetite for self-destruction. Haas makes Crazy Eyes surprisingly digestible.
Cinemalogue
Todd Jorgenson
Just because the main characters are in a constant state of depression and angst doesn't mean the audience should have to wallow in their misery as well.
Film Journal International
Shirley Sealy
The only audience likely to respond favorably to this vanity production about the slow, painful self-discovery of a rich, young Hollywood filmmaker would be other rich, young and screwed-up Hollywood filmmakers. But even they might be put off.
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