An incredibly honest comedy about growing up and the turbulence that can occur while trying to maintain friendships along the way.
This may not be the first film to follow a group of people comically trying to cover something up, but it certainly is one of the best.
It’s heartbreaking, well-acted and at times a little uncomfortable. But the discomfort serves a purpose in illustrating the complications of grief.
The film not only lives up to the group’s audacious brand of humor. It spins a wildly creative commentary on human connection too.
A buddy comedy meets coming-of-age tearjerker in Sacramento – a charming flick in which Michael Angarano and Michael Cera play two friends facing first-time fatherhood in vastly different ways.
Dunham and Fry lack genuine chemistry for the father/daughter connection, so the film feels pieced together with noticeable missing elements.
A refreshingly simple revenge flick with a real bite to it.
Even though it runs a little longer than a traditional therapy session, Group Therapy offers just as much optimism and reassurance.
The whole documentary is basically a therapy tour for McCarthy.