Find Movies & TV
Home
Live TV
On Demand
Explore
Movies & TV Shows
Most Popular
Leaving Soon
Categories
Action
Animation
Comedy
Crime
Descriptive Audio
Documentary
Drama
En Español
Horror
Music
Romance
Sci-Fi
Thriller
Western
Explore
Browse Channels
Featured Channels
NFL Channel
Ion Mystery
CBS Sports HQ
Categories
Hit TV
Crime
Reality
News
Sports
Game Shows
History & Science
Sci-Fi & Action
Movies
Chills & Thrills
Classic TV
Nature & Travel
Comedy
Black Entertainment
Cooking
Home
Kids & Family
Sporting
En Español
International
Gaming & Anime
Lifestyle
Music
Sign In
Look Both Ways
2005 1h 40m PG-13
Drama
,
Romance
,
Mystery
7.0
76%
75%
61%
Add to Watchlist
During one unusually hot and tragic weekend, four people struggle after hearing some life-changing news. This, in turn, brings them together.
More
Directed By
Sarah Watt
Written By
Sarah Watt
Studio
Hibiscus Films
Watch on these services
Free
Cast of Look Both Ways
William McInnes
Nick
Justine Clarke
Meryl Lee
Anthony Hayes
Andy Walker
Lisa Flanagan
Anna
Andrew S. Gilbert
Phil
Daniela Farinacci
Julia
Andreas Sobik
Train Driver
Maggie Dence
Joan
Edwin Hodgeman
Jim
Sacha Horler
Linda
Irena Dangov
Train Driver's Wife
Mary Kostakidis
SBS Newsreader
Leon Teague
Doctor
Robbie Hoad
Rob
Elena Carapetis
Maria
Tamara Lee
Policewoman
Jacquelynne Willcox
Current Affairs Reporter
Laura Peisley
Emily
Alex Rafalowicz
Train Driver's Son
Violet Gilbert
Phil's Toddler
Jacqueline Cook
Miriam
Olive Gilbert
Jasmine 'Jas'
Miranda Gilbert
Sophie
Lucia Mastrantone
Cathy
Isabella Reimer
Maddie
Jordan Leovic
Oliver
Joshua Clarke
Boy in Wheelchair
Alirio Zavarce
Smoking Cricketer
Craig Behenna
Cricket Captain
Taimi Allan
Pregnant Mother
Eliza Lovell
Scared Mother
Carmel Johnson
Charge Nurse
Rocky Feo
Father of Sick Child
Philip Spruce
Actor
Aaron J. March
Dinner Guest
Anni Lindner
Dinner Guest
Daniel Whyte
Dinner Guest
Evan Branford
Teenager
Joe Weber
Milk Bar Man
Look Both Ways Reviews
Houston Chronicle
Bruce Westbrook
The bottom line is that none of this goes anywhere beyond a droning funeral procession.
San Francisco Chronicle
G. Allen Johnson
Filled with aloof and confused characters just treading water, and even if they are likable, it eventually becomes tiresome. It's like one big pity party.
Boston Globe
Janice Page
A black-humored screenplay, realistic performances, eye-catching artwork, and a few creative turns on some well-worn themes.
Seattle Times
Tom Keogh
How each person copes with trauma and renewal adds up to a tender tale rich in memorable performances.
AV Club
Noel Murray
After the first hour, it's clear the movie isn't going to offer any surprising new insights into messed-up modernity.
Newsday
John Anderson
The much-honored Australian dramedy Look Both Ways may be the type of film that provides a purifying rain just when its beleaguered characters need it.
Los Angeles Times
Kenneth Turan
... a fearless movie about a fearful subject, an unusually empathetic and quite funny film that deals with death and dying in the most offbeat and casually life-affirming way.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
I watched the movie in a kind of fascination. It is poetic and unforgiving, romantic and stark.
Chicago Tribune
Jessica Reaves
... a surprisingly (and inexplicably) uplifting meditation on the myriad ways life makes us all acutely miserable.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
Watt's characters ... laugh at themselves and their dark obsessions, and there's something optimistic in the filmmaker's clear-eyed, straightforward storytelling style.
Austin Chronicle
Brian Clark
It's the type of film in which a character sits next to his work acquaintance for a few moments, then asks, 'Do you believe in God?'
New York Post
Lou Lumenick
Look Both Ways works its way to an improbably cheerful ending, but getting there is a slow trip.
Ebert & Roeper
Richard Roeper
The film itself is beautifully done.
New York Magazine/Vulture
David Edelstein
... deliriously inventive ...
Washington Post
Ann Hornaday
Though Watt's emphasis on coincidence and fate seems strained at times, Look Both Ways is rich in dreamy summer atmosphere and deadpan wit.
Variety
Richard Kuipers
An imaginative, humorous and truthful contemplation of human reaction to the inexplicable.
New York Daily News
Jami Bernard
A pleasantly peculiar ensemble movie about melancholic people coping with random tragedy.
Chicago Reader
J. R. Jones
The convincing characters and hearty examination of mortality make this fresh and oddly uplifting.
New York Times
Jeannette Catsoulis
Sarah Watt's film follows a group of disparate and desperate characters over the course of one of the most depressing weekends in movie history.
Watch Look Both Ways Videos
Look Both Ways
Take Plex everywhere
Watch free anytime, anywhere, on almost any device.
See the full list of supported devices
Home
Live TV
On Demand