The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby

The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby

By Ned Benson

  • Genre: Romance
  • Release Date: 2014-09-12
  • Advisory Rating: R
  • Runtime: 2h 2min
  • Director: Ned Benson
  • Production Company: Myriad Pictures
  • Production Country: United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 5.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
6.2/10
6.2
From 286 Ratings

Description

This beautifully honest portrait of love follows the once happily married couple Conor (James McAvoy of X-MEN FRANCHISE, ATONEMENT) and Eleanor (Academy Award®-nominee Jessica Chastain of ZERO DARK THIRTY, THE TREE OF LIFE). After being torn apart by tragedy, the couple find themselves strangers longing to reclaim the passion and life they once shared. This ensemble romance costars Academy Award®-nominee Viola Davis (THE HELP, TV's HOW TO GET AWAY WITH MURDER), Bill Hader (TV's SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE), Academy Award®-winner William Hurt (A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE), and Isabelle Huppert (AMOUR). Capturing a complete picture of love, loss, empathy, and truth, this acclaimed drama is an ambitious combination of two movies (HIM and HER) told from differing perspectives.

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Reviews

  • Authentic

    5
    By AverageGuy92
    Exceptionally crafted story of true love, heartbreak and experience.
  • Beautiful film

    5
    By YanaMinarov
    Beautiful film; deep, sad and promising at the same time. Jessica Chastain’s performance is superb.
  • What a waste of talent

    1
    By adlervan
    James McAvoy possesses a truly diabolical amount of charisma and talent - but this film uses about 2% of his gifts. Jessica Chastain has a cool outer toughness and fiery inner steeliness that I tend to admire - neither of which are utilized by this material. Their characters in this film have ZERO personality - Eleanor being endlessly sad or listening to bad music on the car radio whilst chomping Twizzlers does not a personal make; Connor trading toothless insults with his best friend and being a stalkery bore are...boring, which this actor NEVER is. Both leads were miscast - both are far too old and both have an innately powerful persona which makes them not at all believeable as drippy, uninteresting, directionless, sad hipsters. It's a shame because this is inherently rich subject matter, but the execution at script level and in the direction is very poor and lets them both down entirely. Note: I rented the film, which gives you the "Them" version of the story. What masochist would ever watch "Him", "Her", and "Them"?

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