Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Image Credit: Pine District Pictures If you’re curious about where to watch and stream Frances Ha, look no further! We have all ...
You know Frances Ha. She's the modern-day slouch, also known as the Lena Dunham of this generation: she has vague art-career ambitions, thrives on the independence of singlehood, and acts as a lesbian ...
“I’m not a real person yet.” The line is a little obvious coming from the lead in a movie about a young woman lacking the conventional signposts of adulthood — a career, a stable relationship, a place ...
It's hard to resist a good coming-of-age story, and, now, one of the best movies of the genre has made its way to Netflix. An indie darling starring Greta Gerwig and directed by Noah Baumbach, Frances ...
Since first gaining notice several years ago as the reigning queen of “mumblecore” (a film genre defined by tiny budgets and naturalistic dialog) — and up through recent roles in more mainstream fare ...
The easy knock on Noah Baumbach would be to say that he’s spent 17 years as a filmmaker circling around to the same place. In his charming 1995 debut Kicking and Screaming, Baumbach explored the lives ...
Although her trio of Academy Award winners as a director have propelled her career to new heady heights, Greta Gerwig's work as an actress is also worthy of immense praise. Out of a selection of ...
Here’s Nick Pinkerton on two highly anticipated films from NYFF’s main slate: Brian De Palma’s Passion and Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha: Brian De Palma and Noah Baumbach have become thick as thieves–odd ...
You’ll have to wait until the final scene to make sense of the title, a metaphor for Frances’s (Greta Gerwig) incompleteness, the sense of herself as not yet whole, not yet fully formed, a view she ...
New York is a cruel and beautiful place, just as 27 is a cruel and beautiful age. In Frances Ha, Greta Gerwig plays a woman who’s feeling the weight of both. Frances is an aspiring dancer who has ...
The Catholic Movie Club is a short weekly essay pulling out spiritual themes in our favorite films. You can discuss the movies with other readers in the comments on this page or in our Facebook group.