I read the book. Honestly, I don’t think domestic violence inside a romance movie works. If you want a more accurate representation of the fear and paranoia that comes with leaving an abuser, watch The Invisible Man.
As a former cop who worked on the bad side of town and had to answer a domestic violence call at least once a day, no exaggeration, I don't think I need to tell anyone the evils of DV,. Once I heard this review, and the very artificial cutesy names of the characters, and how it is filmed like a soapy Nicholas Sparks in eternal springtime, I think I would object to this movie in the way that Gene and Roger did to Sleeping With They Enemy, in that the horrors of DV and abuse towards women is too serious to be trifled with in a movie that doesn't know how to properly deal with it. I never believe any topic should be out of bounds. Just know what to do with it, respectfully. Blake Lively is a very under-rated actress. I'm sure she is VERY good in this.
The movie is very light and glossy, but it has a bit of a PSA quality to it, and it never wavers in its anti-DV message - there's no wavering on the part of the protagonist, and no victim blaming here (except we are put in the POV of Lily Bloom in that she glosses over what really happened until she accepts that what happened really did happen). It's not realistic at all, but it has the right attitude.
I just saw it. I think the reason that it was bottled the way it was I actually appreciated. It was at the beginning. She says she’s an unreliable marriage when she’s talking to Ryle. And I stink they muddled it to show how in the real world people that are in love go to great lengths to lie to themselves about their abusive relationship. because I think they were trying to film it and show it in such a way that showed us what she saw when she saw it
Blake Lively is beautiful but she’s too old for this part and her acting was flat the young Lilly was way better. This entire movie should’ve been a Netflix movie. We needed more Atlas too.
I didn’t read the book at first. I’m trying to figure out why anyone thought it was a romance novel. I look at it as three people; Atlas, Lily and Rhyl, who all have had incredible trauma in their lives, and how they deal or don’t deal with it . Yes, Lily does fall in love with Rhyl, has a child with him and marries him, but ends up, leaving after the abuse gets too much . That is my perception and observation. I’ve actually heard so many things at the book isn’t that well written .
I haven't read the book so came to the movie fresh. Loved Blake Lively but I felt the film just skimmed the surface of the DV subject. I also think character development in the film could have been better. I couldn't understand as a viewer why a character like Lily would fall for someone like Ryle. I thought the roof top scene had the best banter between the 2 characters....and after that it was instead romantic scene montages and conversations which lacked that initial spark. It was still a good film, but I wonder if the book was better...?
The book was way way better. The movie was an epic disappointment. The screenplay was too rushed and I couldn't connect with any of the characters. I didn't even feel bad for the protagonist when she was going through abuse.
I actually like this movie. Unlike other domestic violence movies which loves to show the man as a super villain, they show how women would stay with a man who is abusive. People always ask why did the woman stay. Sometimes it’s because you don’t think of it as abuse. The character of Atlas is where I have a problem. That’s where the movie seemed super convenient.
I liked the movie quite a bit too, but everything in it is the idealized perfect version of reality, even the way she escapes the DV - it's not the real world at all. The message is good though. For a real world take, I think the TV series "Maid" is much more accurate and impactful.
@@rayreacts2295 Yea, the book is ridiculous to me.
12 днів тому
I don´t remember who said it but the problem with "film stars" today is that we know too much about their private life. So when we see Blake Lively with a man, in the back of our heads we are thinking "dude, that´s Ryan Reynolds wife you are kissing". (as for the film... it´s too ridiculous).
Always nice to see the fantastic Katie Walsh. Of course always awesome to see you Christy. Enjoyed your review. The fact Katie read the book adds to the review. Yes, those character names are ridiculous. I do want to check this out. However, skipping it (and the crowds) this weekend. Will try and see it next week.
The awful wardrobe selections was so distracting. I also felt Blake's acting was so flat. Justin was good in it tho. The movie felt choppy to me and I felt like I was watching a lifetime movie instead. The book is intense, this was very watered down.
Meh, not much to say about this one, but glad to see Katie back!! I do agree that it can be a bit distracting when you have read the book when seeing the movie.
I saw the movie yesterday. I would describe it as Sweet Home Alabama meets The Devil Wears Prada with a splash of Sleeping With the Enemy. And yes.. the 3 don’t blend well!
I really enjoyed the movie. I haven't heard of the author before and I didn't know anything about the movie and so I had no expectations of the characters or plot. I live in South Texas County and was really surprised when I went to purchase a ticket to find that there were few available seats. Next to me were some girls who looked to be about sixteen. I though the themes were mature for them, but they seemed to like it.
@@BreakfastAllDayI honest to god believe justin isn't that morally sound. In comparision to the hollycouple, sure ,but my Unpopular opinion is why was this man going around for 2 yrs trying to make a movie out of a book that glamorizes ab*se!?! Evn with so many women raising alarm about the books impact on impressionable mind ever since. It seems he is now trying to do damage control or play silent victim ,and lucky for him both idiots blake and ryan are making it easy for him. The book is the problem in the first place. Wouldn't that mean justin was as tone deaf as blake.
I just saw this. I knew the divorce was coming and they would never get back together when after the crib scene, he said he would get help. Uhm no, doc, you don't get to ask to come back WITHOUT getting the help FIRST. It's too late now.
I highly recommend us film nerds sharing this video with friends who were fans of the book and came to us with questions on the movie. I did with a friend, and she just responded, "I agree with the blonde woman’s rating and reasoning behind it." So there you go! ;)
I went in with low expectations so that definitely helped. It has some corny moments with the redemption stuff at the end, but it seems well made for its audience.
Watching this movie all I could think is: "It Ends with Us = All Too Well ([insert runtime here] minutes Version)". Also, as someone who works on marketing, this is a really hard movie to market because the subject matter is hard to sell to audiences. If I really knew what the movie is about, I would probably wouldn't willingly go and watch it (note I have never read the book before, I heard of it but never read it).
I believe the director and Blake Lively herself disagree on how to market this movie and each one has promoting it differently. It is misleading how Blake sells it, I guess...
I just watched this and confused about what to think. Weird montages, music. Some cliches. I love Blake's wardrobe. Other than that it's not that great.
I think you guys missed the salient point, revealed in what I, at first, thought was a generic title. I was wrong, and it hit me hard. I truly think this film can impact those suffering from both domestic abuse and the PTSD of those effected by that viscous cycle.The movie's power surprised me. @BreakfastAllDay
This movie was awesome! It was one of the best movies I have seen this year and I am a guy. My Dad also loved the movie. I know it will not get oscars attention but both the movie and Blake Lively should get some awards credit. It will end up being better than some of the Oscar movies later on.
More problematic, annoying quirks than the movie?! SO MANY UNBELIEVABLE CHOICES! It's conveniently rainy on 2 occasions when tears are helpful. Totally one I'd love to hear the SPOILER talk on!
I enjoyed it. They nailed the romance. There was chemistry between the actors. Some early camera work and the cleaning store montage nearly took me out of the movie but I was invested in it. I didn't read the book.
@mishysbooknook The domestic violence part is why I watched the movie. I think most of the criticism about the movie is they didn't do the domestic violence well. About 80% of the time we spend with Blake & Baldoni is romance though there are subtle signs that he has a dark side. Perhaps they did that to show how easy people can fall into those type of relationships.
From Twilight to 30 shades to this, why do the most successful romance books aimed at women always include include some grotesque toxic masculinity and violence? It's no secret that a woman is most likely to be murdered by her romantic partner or someone she knows well. So is this some kind of way to rationalize, to spin the average woman's dark reality into some wonderful sexy romance?
My 19 yr old and I are fans of the book and movie. The questions you have maybe explained in the book. I’m hopeful for book 2, It Starts with Us, to become a movie too. Then we’ll all get more Atlas. If rumors are true then it probably won’t happen since we still need Justin/Ryle. People are harsh on Colleen Hoovers writing, I enjoyed the story. Varity is a great book she wrote that will hopefully become a movie too.
It made a shitton of money over the weekend, so whatever differences everyone had in the making of the movie, maybe money can resolve them for a sequel lol.
People are harsh on Colleen because she trivialized DV even though she used to be a social worker. The way this movie is promoted as a cutesie flower girl romcom makes a joke out of the serious topic of DV. I don’t why I’m surprised though from an author who released nail polish line based on her book about domestic abuse?? And was going to publish a colouring book based on it ends with us??
Me who haven't reaided the book for me it's another "If the Guy is Good-looking and Has a Six-pack. it doesn't matter if you have done Terrible things, unforgivable things, all is Forgiven" movie. Me who's a victim of child abuse'. Like why bring him to her house after the abuse or have him be the one deliver her baby. "But he'd the father", but he'd assault her, also sexually assault her. Who cares if he's the father.
Easy to say if you haven’t been through it. I love my father, who also best the shit out of me. It wasn’t frequent but I remember the belt. And he did that because his mother beat the shit out of him wit a belt. And I love that woman too. She was a complicated woman herself, I luckily understand I don’t want to be someone who does that and control my anger. People who are abusive are not villains that’s just how they stupidly deal with things in a world that supported physical punishment. Hell, we got women who are willing to vote for men to control women TODAY!
You know this movie is not good when every other scene is bombarded with songs. And of course this is Hollywood and a male character comes to the rescue.
I saw the movie and if this doesn't demonstrate what I've been saying for years, I don't know what does. There's a bias against women's escapism. ( *IEWU* has a green 56% critics score on RT, though a 92% audience score.) It's sad that two female critics are following a pattern established by male critics decades ago, rating all chick flicks as awful, while giving praise or passes to guy movies. It's a notion rooted in sexism. The hate leveled on *50 Shades of Grey* a few years back was absurd. I admit that film was trashy, though not nearly as bad as critics had you believe. But *IEWU* is actually good! It's well-made and acted. Yes, it's a YA love story, and so there are certain beats it needs to hit, including a little soap opera. But that's the genre. Are we now going to eliminate entire genres and make everything an arthouse movie? While we're at it, let's eliminate action movies and superhero movies. *Die Hard* would work better as a chamber drama🤪 Movies should be judged based on their genres, not by attempting to change them into something they're not. *IEWU* is escapism, and should only be reviewed as such. It hits all the marks as a YA romance. Critics try to come across as smarter than the rest of us, and for that reason they've dropped the ball on *IEWU.* I'm glad audiences have vetoed the critics. In this case, audiences are being smarter. As pure escapism, this film is nearly perfect. And that's why it's a smash. It felt to me like you two enjoyed the movie, though were nitpicking things like the rent for the store's real estate and the length of the movie. Katie said she likes reading romance novels. Those are all hokey anyway lol. I can't imagine that she enjoys romance novels, though somehow not this movie. Unless by romance novels she means The English Patient and The Age of Innocence 🤨 I'd love to hear Alonso's take on *IEWU.* I know he likes Hallmark Xmas movies, so I can't imagine him having a problem with *IEWU.* Unless he decides to put his critic hat on rather than enjoy the movie instinctively. Critics shouldn't be so hard on female-centric escapism because it discourages the production of it. As it is, we get very few romcoms and love stories for the big screen.
If she came from a home w an abuse father she would have quickly repositioned herself off the ledge when he came up the rooftop kicking the chair. I thought his hand swung back because he was burned? That was supposed to be on purpose?
(SPOILER) ... The ending reframes all those events that looked like accidents at first, revealing that she'd been telling herself a more benign version of what happened.
So many ridiculous coincidences in this. And she makes a new best friend in one day. And abortion is never discussed. Oh well at least they got the Boston accents right 😉
A terrible interview. It’s one thing to criticize, but creating a book or movie that millions love is a whole different level. Maybe these ladies should try writing something meaningful themselves before tearing down others’ work. That’s where the real difficulty lies.
@@wilfreddale764 you do know that there are a lot of young people who become great doctors very quickly, just because they are smart and find their destiny
I thought the screenwriting was terrible lol. Like there were way too many awkward pauses and I feel like they could have added way more conversations that actually happned in the book!
Katie!!! Yeah. Love when she comes on.
So do we!
I read the book. Honestly, I don’t think domestic violence inside a romance movie works.
If you want a more accurate representation of the fear and paranoia that comes with leaving an abuser, watch The Invisible Man.
That was surprisingly excellent.
As a former cop who worked on the bad side of town and had to answer a domestic violence call at least once a day, no exaggeration, I don't think I need to tell anyone the evils of DV,. Once I heard this review, and the very artificial cutesy names of the characters, and how it is filmed like a soapy Nicholas Sparks in eternal springtime, I think I would object to this movie in the way that Gene and Roger did to Sleeping With They Enemy, in that the horrors of DV and abuse towards women is too serious to be trifled with in a movie that doesn't know how to properly deal with it.
I never believe any topic should be out of bounds. Just know what to do with it, respectfully.
Blake Lively is a very under-rated actress. I'm sure she is VERY good in this.
Well said 👏👏👏
The movie is very light and glossy, but it has a bit of a PSA quality to it, and it never wavers in its anti-DV message - there's no wavering on the part of the protagonist, and no victim blaming here (except we are put in the POV of Lily Bloom in that she glosses over what really happened until she accepts that what happened really did happen).
It's not realistic at all, but it has the right attitude.
I just saw it. I think the reason that it was bottled the way it was I actually appreciated. It was at the beginning. She says she’s an unreliable marriage when she’s talking to Ryle. And I stink they muddled it to show how in the real world people that are in love go to great lengths to lie to themselves about their abusive relationship. because I think they were trying to film it and show it in such a way that showed us what she saw when she saw it
Blake Lively is beautiful but she’s too old for this part and her acting was flat the young Lilly was way better. This entire movie should’ve been a Netflix movie. We needed more Atlas too.
Katie Walsh! Always a treat when members of the extended B.A.D. crew swing by.
We always love seeing her.
I didn’t read the book at first. I’m trying to figure out why anyone thought it was a romance novel.
I look at it as three people; Atlas, Lily and Rhyl, who all have had incredible trauma in their lives, and how they deal or don’t deal with it .
Yes, Lily does fall in love with Rhyl, has a child with him and marries him, but ends up, leaving after the abuse gets too much .
That is my perception and observation.
I’ve actually heard so many things at the book isn’t that well written .
I haven't read the book so came to the movie fresh. Loved Blake Lively but I felt the film just skimmed the surface of the DV subject. I also think character development in the film could have been better. I couldn't understand as a viewer why a character like Lily would fall for someone like Ryle. I thought the roof top scene had the best banter between the 2 characters....and after that it was instead romantic scene montages and conversations which lacked that initial spark. It was still a good film, but I wonder if the book was better...?
Book was much better!!
@@calliesmith7571 Cool. Did you like the film?
The book was way way better. The movie was an epic disappointment. The screenplay was too rushed and I couldn't connect with any of the characters. I didn't even feel bad for the protagonist when she was going through abuse.
Yes!!! I SWEAR I needed more Atlas in this.
I actually like this movie. Unlike other domestic violence movies which loves to show the man as a super villain, they show how women would stay with a man who is abusive. People always ask why did the woman stay. Sometimes it’s because you don’t think of it as abuse.
The character of Atlas is where I have a problem. That’s where the movie seemed super convenient.
I liked the movie quite a bit too, but everything in it is the idealized perfect version of reality, even the way she escapes the DV - it's not the real world at all. The message is good though.
For a real world take, I think the TV series "Maid" is much more accurate and impactful.
He was a super villian in the book though… like he is not a good person
@@rayreacts2295 Yea, the book is ridiculous to me.
I don´t remember who said it but the problem with "film stars" today is that we know too much about their private life. So when we see Blake Lively with a man, in the back of our heads we are thinking "dude, that´s Ryan Reynolds wife you are kissing". (as for the film... it´s too ridiculous).
The Town was 14 years ago. Blake Lively has worn many beautiful dresses since then. And made zero good movies.
Oh, my, no! A Simple Favor with Anna Kendrick was great. The Shallows was pretty good. And, even Age of Adaline was OK enough.
Wasn't she in The Shallows that was a good movie
I will not stand for A Simple Favor erasure 🤣
Yeah…. No
I used to dont care about Blake.. but after I watched the Adaline movie.. I saw her differently. Loved it.
Always nice to see the fantastic Katie Walsh. Of course always awesome to see you Christy. Enjoyed your review. The fact Katie read the book adds to the review. Yes, those character names are ridiculous. I do want to check this out. However, skipping it (and the crowds) this weekend. Will try and see it next week.
The awful wardrobe selections was so distracting. I also felt Blake's acting was so flat. Justin was good in it tho. The movie felt choppy to me and I felt like I was watching a lifetime movie instead. The book is intense, this was very watered down.
Meh, not much to say about this one, but glad to see Katie back!! I do agree that it can be a bit distracting when you have read the book when seeing the movie.
KATIE!!! Always a pleasure to see her.
I was seriously considering seeing this tomorrow but after this , I'm debating , I'm a fan of Blake Lively but is it more like wait until streaming ?
I dont agree that the movie was better than the book. The book was better. Much better.
I saw the movie yesterday. I would describe it as Sweet Home Alabama meets The Devil Wears Prada with a splash of Sleeping With the Enemy. And yes.. the 3 don’t blend well!
I really enjoyed the movie. I haven't heard of the author before and I didn't know anything about the movie and so I had no expectations of the characters or plot. I live in South Texas County and was really surprised when I went to purchase a ticket to find that there were few available seats. Next to me were some girls who looked to be about sixteen. I though the themes were mature for them, but they seemed to like it.
Our theater was surprisingly crowded too! Thanks for sharing your experience.
There were several showings where it was almost sold out in my Seattle area.
The fact that they left out the age of atlas in this movie when in the book he’s 18-19 and lily is only 15. 🤢
Well they aged everyone up in the movie, right?
That was the biggest plus. The ages in the book is absolutely ridiculous.
@@BreakfastAllDayI honest to god believe justin isn't that morally sound. In comparision to the hollycouple, sure ,but my Unpopular opinion is why was this man going around for 2 yrs trying to make a movie out of a book that glamorizes ab*se!?! Evn with so many women raising alarm about the books impact on impressionable mind ever since. It seems he is now trying to do damage control or play silent victim ,and lucky for him both idiots blake and ryan are making it easy for him. The book is the problem in the first place. Wouldn't that mean justin was as tone deaf as blake.
First time here, thank you for the review. Got curious about Katie's books, would love to hear about them and recommendations.
So glad you're here! Will ask Katie to chime in with some suggestions.
Saw it and I want to get ATLAS tattooed on my shoulder now. I currently have zero tattoos and I am over 40. Thank you
I just saw this. I knew the divorce was coming and they would never get back together when after the crib scene, he said he would get help. Uhm no, doc, you don't get to ask to come back WITHOUT getting the help FIRST. It's too late now.
I highly recommend us film nerds sharing this video with friends who were fans of the book and came to us with questions on the movie. I did with a friend, and she just responded, "I agree with the blonde woman’s rating and reasoning behind it." So there you go! ;)
Thanks from the blonde woman!
Of course the older lady that works at a flower shop lands the surgeon! 😅😂
I went in with low expectations so that definitely helped. It has some corny moments with the redemption stuff at the end, but it seems well made for its audience.
Watching this movie all I could think is: "It Ends with Us = All Too Well ([insert runtime here] minutes Version)". Also, as someone who works on marketing, this is a really hard movie to market because the subject matter is hard to sell to audiences. If I really knew what the movie is about, I would probably wouldn't willingly go and watch it (note I have never read the book before, I heard of it but never read it).
It's a lot to contain all in one movie. And yes, lots of Taylor Swift in here!
@@BreakfastAllDay Also, I agree with Katie... More Brandon Sklenar's Atlas 😉
I believe the director and Blake Lively herself disagree on how to market this movie and each one has promoting it differently. It is misleading how Blake sells it, I guess...
I just watched this and confused about what to think. Weird montages, music. Some cliches. I love Blake's wardrobe. Other than that it's not that great.
I just saw this with my twenty-year-old daughter.
And what did you think?
I think you guys missed the salient point, revealed in what I, at first, thought was a generic title. I was wrong, and it hit me hard. I truly think this film can impact those suffering from both domestic abuse and the PTSD of those effected by that viscous cycle.The movie's power surprised me. @BreakfastAllDay
And?
This movie was awesome! It was one of the best movies I have seen this year and I am a guy. My Dad also loved the movie. I know it will not get oscars attention but both the movie and Blake Lively should get some awards credit. It will end up being better than some of the Oscar movies later on.
More problematic, annoying quirks than the movie?! SO MANY UNBELIEVABLE CHOICES! It's conveniently rainy on 2 occasions when tears are helpful. Totally one I'd love to hear the SPOILER talk on!
I enjoyed it. They nailed the romance. There was chemistry between the actors. Some early camera work and the cleaning store montage nearly took me out of the movie but I was invested in it. I didn't read the book.
@mishysbooknook The domestic violence part is why I watched the movie. I think most of the criticism about the movie is they didn't do the domestic violence well. About 80% of the time we spend with Blake & Baldoni is romance though there are subtle signs that he has a dark side. Perhaps they did that to show how easy people can fall into those type of relationships.
From Twilight to 30 shades to this, why do the most successful romance books aimed at women always include include some grotesque toxic masculinity and violence?
It's no secret that a woman is most likely to be murdered by her romantic partner or someone she knows well. So is this some kind of way to rationalize, to spin the average woman's dark reality into some wonderful sexy romance?
Came to see Katie Walsh after a longtime.
She is cute, sexy, funny, happy & all-around awesome girl.
My 19 yr old and I are fans of the book and movie. The questions you have maybe explained in the book. I’m hopeful for book 2, It Starts with Us, to become a movie too. Then we’ll all get more Atlas. If rumors are true then it probably won’t happen since we still need Justin/Ryle. People are harsh on Colleen Hoovers writing, I enjoyed the story. Varity is a great book she wrote that will hopefully become a movie too.
It made a shitton of money over the weekend, so whatever differences everyone had in the making of the movie, maybe money can resolve them for a sequel lol.
People are harsh on Colleen because she trivialized DV even though she used to be a social worker. The way this movie is promoted as a cutesie flower girl romcom makes a joke out of the serious topic of DV. I don’t why I’m surprised though from an author who released nail polish line based on her book about domestic abuse?? And was going to publish a colouring book based on it ends with us??
I think you guys should do a spoiler portion of your reviews.
Sometimes we do! They don't all merit a spoiler talk.
Me who haven't reaided the book for me it's another "If the Guy is Good-looking and Has a Six-pack. it doesn't matter if you have done Terrible things, unforgivable things, all is Forgiven" movie. Me who's a victim of child abuse'. Like why bring him to her house after the abuse or have him be the one deliver her baby. "But he'd the father", but he'd assault her, also sexually assault her. Who cares if he's the father.
Easy to say if you haven’t been through it. I love my father, who also best the shit out of me. It wasn’t frequent but I remember the belt. And he did that because his mother beat the shit out of him wit a belt. And I love that woman too. She was a complicated woman herself, I luckily understand I don’t want to be someone who does that and control my anger. People who are abusive are not villains that’s just how they stupidly deal with things in a world that supported physical punishment. Hell, we got women who are willing to vote for men to control women TODAY!
You know this movie is not good when every other scene is bombarded with songs. And of course this is Hollywood and a male character comes to the rescue.
I saw the movie and if this doesn't demonstrate what I've been saying for years, I don't know what does. There's a bias against women's escapism. ( *IEWU* has a green 56% critics score on RT, though a 92% audience score.) It's sad that two female critics are following a pattern established by male critics decades ago, rating all chick flicks as awful, while giving praise or passes to guy movies. It's a notion rooted in sexism. The hate leveled on *50 Shades of Grey* a few years back was absurd. I admit that film was trashy, though not nearly as bad as critics had you believe. But *IEWU* is actually good! It's well-made and acted. Yes, it's a YA love story, and so there are certain beats it needs to hit, including a little soap opera. But that's the genre. Are we now going to eliminate entire genres and make everything an arthouse movie? While we're at it, let's eliminate action movies and superhero movies. *Die Hard* would work better as a chamber drama🤪 Movies should be judged based on their genres, not by attempting to change them into something they're not. *IEWU* is escapism, and should only be reviewed as such. It hits all the marks as a YA romance. Critics try to come across as smarter than the rest of us, and for that reason they've dropped the ball on *IEWU.* I'm glad audiences have vetoed the critics. In this case, audiences are being smarter. As pure escapism, this film is nearly perfect. And that's why it's a smash.
It felt to me like you two enjoyed the movie, though were nitpicking things like the rent for the store's real estate and the length of the movie. Katie said she likes reading romance novels. Those are all hokey anyway lol. I can't imagine that she enjoys romance novels, though somehow not this movie. Unless by romance novels she means The English Patient and The Age of Innocence 🤨 I'd love to hear Alonso's take on *IEWU.* I know he likes Hallmark Xmas movies, so I can't imagine him having a problem with *IEWU.* Unless he decides to put his critic hat on rather than enjoy the movie instinctively.
Critics shouldn't be so hard on female-centric escapism because it discourages the production of it. As it is, we get very few romcoms and love stories for the big screen.
I'll read the book. 🎉
If she came from a home w an abuse father she would have quickly repositioned herself off the ledge when he came up the rooftop kicking the chair. I thought his hand swung back because he was burned? That was supposed to be on purpose?
(SPOILER) ...
The ending reframes all those events that looked like accidents at first, revealing that she'd been telling herself a more benign version of what happened.
Really bummed this isn’t absolute dogshit because I’d have liked to review it if only to write the byline “It Ends With Us: At Least It Ends…”
The boy playing atlas didn't look anything like the adult actor lol really took me out of the movie
The movie was so bad. The nerve of the movie to end with the title when it wasn’t earned at all.
That was pretty cheesy.
Blake is beautiful but a terrible actor. She sucks big time!
@@margueteschmidt5276I hope your good at acting .
@@margueteschmidt5276 she’s not terrible at all. No one could’ve delivered that terrible line.
Katie, Rotten Tomatoes posted a wrong score for you. Your RT score says 5/10, but you gave it a 6.5/10 in this video. Just FYI
This was a studio film about DV. For that it is really well-made and works.
So many ridiculous coincidences in this. And she makes a new best friend in one day. And abortion is never discussed. Oh well at least they got the Boston accents right 😉
PSA: Don't drink Olipop soda unless you have the day off or know that all of your co-workers enjoy the smell of old hot dogs.
What inspired this comment?
A terrible interview. It’s one thing to criticize, but creating a book or movie that millions love is a whole different level. Maybe these ladies should try writing something meaningful themselves before tearing down others’ work. That’s where the real difficulty lies.
Some ladies can write a bestselling novel that disturbs the soul, and some ladies can cook a simple meal to soothe the soul!
The author literally pointed out that the male lead is written to be too young to be a neurosurgeon and that was her mistake
@@wilfreddale764 you do know that there are a lot of young people who become great doctors very quickly, just because they are smart and find their destiny
I thought the screenwriting was terrible lol. Like there were way too many awkward pauses and I feel like they could have added way more conversations that actually happned in the book!