Slightly too understated, but also thoroughly involving.
Starting Out in the Evening (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:96
Fresh:83
Rotten:13
Average Rating:7.3/10
Consensus: Starting Out in the Evening features sharp dialogue and moving performances from the talented Frank Langella and Lili Taylor.
Runtime: 1 hr 51 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Though he's spent most of his career as a character actor in supporting roles, Frank Langella gives the lead performance of a lifetime in STARTING OUT IN THE EVENING, based on the novel by Brian... Though he's spent most of his career as a character actor in supporting roles, Frank Langella gives the lead performance of a lifetime in STARTING OUT IN THE EVENING, based on the novel by Brian Morton. Flanked by Lili Taylor and Lauren Ambrose, Langella is the central piece in a film that focuses on its characters. The film begins with aging writer Leonard Schiller (Langella, SUPERMAN RETURNS), a man who feels as obsolete as the typewriter he is pounding away at. Though he has four novels to his credit, he has been working on his fifth for a decade. Enter Heather Wolfe (Ambrose, SIX FEET UNDER), a grad student who plans to write her thesis on Schiller's work. She cajoles the reluctant man into helping her, and they begin a curious friendship. Meanwhile, Schiller's daughter Ariel (Taylor, SIX FEET UNDER) struggles not only with her elderly father, but also with her own desire to have children as she approaches 40. She also grapples with the decision of reconnecting with an ex-boyfriend (Adrian Lester, HUSTLE). As the fading writer Schiller, Langella doesn't give a bold performance that screams for Oscar's attention. Instead, the actor commands the screen with a quiet presence. Heather's attempts at friendship with Schiller--and eventual seduction--may feel awkward at times within the film, but Ambrose's performance is quite genuine. As always, Taylor is impressive, and it's good to see her get a heftier role. The film's other central character is New York's Upper West Side, a player that should receive top billing. Director Andrew Wagner (THE TALENT GIVEN US) allows the neighborhood to play a central role within his engaging film. [More]
Starring: Frank Langella, Lili Taylor, Lauren Ambrose, Adrian Lester
Starring: Frank Langella, Lili Taylor, Lauren Ambrose, Adrian Lester, Jessica Hecht
Director: Andrew Wagner
Director: Andrew Wagner
Screenwriter: Andrew Wagner, Fred Parnes
Producer: Gary Winick, Jake Abraham, Fred Parnes, Andrew Wagner
Composer: Adam Gorgoni
Producer: Nancy Israel
Studio: Roadside Attractions
Reviews for Starting Out in the Evening
Starting Out in the Evening boasts exquisite performances by Langella and Taylor, and that may provide reward enough for most filmgoers.
The film begins a little too much like a Woody Allen film, talky and overwritten, but it soon finds its groove.
one of the year's most pleasing films, intelligently written and directed, and featuring a veteran actor giving the performance of his career
Awkward and sometimes overly subtle, but compelling performances by a cast of normally supporting actors who make the most of their much deserved chance to carry a film.
A gentle, unhurried drama about how people can connect with each other through conversation, nonverbal gestures, and writing.
This is Frank Langella's movie. He's been given a plum of role, and he bites into it with amazing grace and precision.
Langella's "aging" as a result of a stroke is even more impressive than his artful revelations of the authorial process.
A film so quiet that just the crunch of buttered popcorn might drown out some of its subtleties.
A small and intimate drama about a seventy-year old New York novelist and his battle against time. physical vulnerability, and being creatively blocked.
Its academic approach, which allows its characters to be themselves and their relationships to crinkle and fold within each other to no obvious end, shows both strength and vulnerability.
Frank Langella gives a quietly intense performance as a dignified senior shaken out of his mindset while Ambrose keeps us guessing at just what she is up to.
Langella is superb, and Starting Out in the Evening is a classy film... but it could have used a little less circumspection, a little more juice.
The early scenes are electric with sexual tension, smart dialogue, and terrific performances - especially Ambrose's.
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