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Posthumous

2014

Action / Comedy / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Director

Top cast

Jack Huston Photo
Jack Huston as Liam Price
Brit Marling Photo
Brit Marling as McKenzie Grain
Lambert Wilson Photo
Lambert Wilson as Daniel S. Volpe
720p.BLU
756.97 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by juanmuscle10 / 10

I came here cause of her latest funny story with the Asian older lady...

But this one was totally different and very romantic! it was very nice too look at and the dialogue had a nice flow all the way through until the very end. Yes this lady is good, she definitely knows the deal and she can write funny and sexy all the while keeping the intrigue abound and adding interesting bits here and there and it all ties nicely with the ancillary characters that nuance her themes and carry the thing through to the grand very sexy nice finale! I really liked it.

Reviewed by Emerenciano5 / 10

You gotta be kidding!!

Ok, it's a romantic comedy and we shouldn't expect much of it. But, come on, there are so many clichés and it is so far from real life that it is difficult to follow this. There are some good sentences and Huston and Marlin are good actors. But the whole thing is completely dischargable.

Reviewed by olympicator7 / 10

Enjoyable Romantic Comedy

A disgruntled, unsuccessful artist named Liam Price half-destroys his own artwork one night in the basement of an art showroom, after seeing that a set of works by a lesser artist has been put on display instead of his own pieces. Liam walks home drunk, falls asleep in a tunnel, and his things are stolen by a look-alike hobo who then dies that night. Liam is presumed to be dead.

You can see where this is going. "Posthumous" is a predictable but cute movie, sort of like "Rocky" meets "Lust for Life." It has very little substance, but the actors are clearly enjoying themselves, and it is refreshing to see a movie that at least attempts to say something about art without brooding and displaying abject suffering for ninety minutes nonstop.

I say "attempts," because I think that in the long run the movie has nearly nothing to say about art. It is about a man who likes to express himself in art but is not sure if anyone is listening. He meets McKenzie Grain, a lovely and intelligent journalist (played by the wonderful Brit Marling),and finds that she is fascinated by the "dead" Liam's artwork; and so Liam poses as his own brother, telling journalist about himself and trying to describe how important it is to be true to oneself. He sees through her misplaced ambitions about being a reporter; and she begins to see through his supposed indifference to the world.

This movie takes place in Berlin; but I did not get a strong sense of setting. One of the first ideas put forth in this movie is an environmental issue, that of "the bees." Bees are dying, and this is a bad thing because we depend upon bees to pollinate our food supply. This is brought up perhaps one more time in the entire movie. What is the relevance? Is Liam trying to illustrate to us, through his art, that we need to allow things to "pollinate" our world? That we must accept and embrace the little things in life, so that we can grow and prosper? This is a movie about being in the right place at the right time, and being able to accept the struggle and bleakness and death around you, because those terrible things are what make us who we are. I think the art of this movie could have played a larger role to display that idea; but the relationship of Liam and McKenzie manages to illustrate that premise in a way that is charming and touching.

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