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Everyone Else
2009 1h 59m Not Rated
Drama
,
Romance
6.6
88%
62%
61%
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While on a Mediterranean vacation, a seemingly happy boyfriend and girlfriend find their connection to one another tested as they bond with another couple.
More
Directed By
Maren Ade
Written By
Maren Ade
Studio
Komplizen Film
,
WDR
,
and more
Watch on these services
Free
Rent $3.99
Buy $9.99
Cast of Everyone Else
Birgit Minichmayr
Gitti
Lars Eidinger
Chris
Hans-Jochen Wagner
Hans
Nicole Marischka
Sana
Carina Wiese
Schwester von Chris
Paula Hartmann
Rebecca
Mira Partecke
Urlauberin
Atef Vogel
Urlauber
Laura Zedda
Baby
Claudio Melis
Mann im Auto
Everyone Else Reviews
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
It's about private, emotional phenomena: the tiny tremors and imperceptible shifts that bring a couple closer together or drive them apart, almost without their noticing.
Detroit News
Tom Long
Resolutely odd, near static at times and yet strangely effective, Everyone Else goes nowhere in particular, but then that's the point.
Los Angeles Times
Betsy Sharkey
A film that unsettles as often as it seduces, though it does very well with both.
San Francisco Chronicle
Walter V. Addiego
It's an impressive achievement: The film reveals things about each person's inner world, and how it looks to the other, without making us feel as if we're lost in a house of mirrors.
Washington Post
Dan Kois
All that's certain is that we're getting to know these two characters exceptionally well and that their tics and flaws are as recognizable as our own.
Boxoffice Magazine
Amy Nicholson
It's an unsparing, vrit look at the damage people do when they're only focused on the damage being done to them.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
This is a film that will surely try the patience of some, but there's wisdom here: jagged shards of wisdom, at the very least.
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Rob Nelson
Like Cassavetes' A Woman Under the Influence, Ade's film is as unpredictable and ambiguous as it is raw.
New York Post
V.A. Musetto
The well-acted, pleasantly lensed drama doesn't recall Hollywood's generic approach to fragile couples, and that's just fine with me.
AV Club
Scott Tobias
Everyone Else unloads a fusillade of truth bombs about those painfully specific moments when communication breaks down and couples start talking past each other. It isn't pretty to witness, but the pain of it smarts.
New York Times
Manohla Dargis
Ms. Ade doesn't pretend to have an answer to our most profound questions about love in her plaintive scenes from a romance. But the wonderful last line -- "look at me" -- suggests one place to start.
Lessons of Darkness
Nick Schager
Provides riveting, intimate immersion in its twosome's sweet, sour, multifaceted union.
Austin Chronicle
Marc Savlov
If you haven't been in this relationship, then you surely know someone who has: Chris and Gitti are as recognizably human as a glance in the morning mirror, and just as strangely distorted.
Philadelphia City Paper
Sam Adams
Feels less like voyeurism than symbiosis, merging spectator and spectacle until the boundary between them starts to dissolve.
The Atlantic
Ed Koch
The movie is a visual treat, but Everyone Else, which makes no sense as a title, should have been called Pretty Boy, Girl, and Island.
Chicago Reader
J. R. Jones
Maren Ade has created a minutely detailed portrait of people so exclusive they wind up excluding each other.
The Simon
Tim Grierson
Like love itself, Everyone Else is far from perfect, but its sustaining pleasures make you wonder how you ever lived without it.
Village Voice
J. Hoberman
More fascinating than enjoyable. Placing a youngish, newly formed couple under relentless observation, Ade's two-hour squirmathon gets a bit more intimate on the subject of intimacy than the viewer might wish.
ReelTalk Movie Reviews
Jeffrey Chen
Notable for its realism ... striking in its simple relatability.
Antagony & Ecstasy
Tim Brayton
It has some stiffness around the edges, but its emotional truth is beyond reproach.
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