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Macjournal review 2017
Macjournal review 2017















The only thing we’re told about Nicholson’s character is that her name is Beth everything else we’re left to sort out - or pry out - for ourselves.

macjournal review 2017

It’s also a devastatingly authentic drama that’s as guarded and unforthcoming as its protagonist. Read More: The 2017 IndieWire TIFF Bible: Every Review, Interview, and News Item Posted During the Festival

macjournal review 2017

But lo, this review brings good news for all the potential fans who have been failing the actress (and themselves) for far too long: There has never been a better showcase for her talents than “ Who We Are Now.” Told with the full texture of real life, Nicholson’s second collaboration with “From Nowhere” filmmaker Matthew Newton is a close-up character study that explores notions of forgiveness and self-worth with surgical precision.

#Macjournal review 2017 movie#

Now 46 years old and more compelling than ever, Nicholson is doing some of her best work at a point in her life when most actresses are being callously aged out of their careers.īut nobody can be told what makes Julianne Nicholson so great, you have to see it for yourself - she’s kind of like the Matrix in that way (a movie in which she regrettably wasn’t cast). 'White Noise': All the Details on Noah Baumbach's Film Starring Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig 'Our Ties' Review: A Family Comedy with Brain Damageīest Movies Never Made: 40 Lost Projects from Christopher Nolan, Quentin Tarantino, and More 'Bros' Review: Billy Eichner's Gay Rom-Com Makes the Familiar Radical















Macjournal review 2017