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      The Only Living Boy in New York

      2017, Drama/Romance, 1h 30m

      90 Reviews 1,000+ Ratings

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      Critics Consensus

      Narratively messy and cloying, The Only Living Boy in New York is a romantic trifle that audiences won't want to give a second date. Read critic reviews

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      Movie Info

      After graduating from college and moving into an apartment, young Thomas Webb befriends an alcoholic neighbor who dispenses worldly wisdom alongside shots of whiskey. Webb's world soon comes crashing down when he learns that his father is having an affair with a beautiful and seductive woman. Determined to break up the relationship, Thomas winds up sleeping with her, launching a chain of events that will change everything that he thinks he knows about his family and himself.

      • Rating: R (Some Drug Material|Language)

      • Genre: Drama, Romance

      • Original Language: English

      • Director: Marc Webb

      • Producer: Albert Berger, Ron Yerxa

      • Writer: Allan Loeb

      • Release Date (Theaters):  limited

      • Release Date (Streaming):

      • Box Office (Gross USA): $623.0K

      • Runtime:

      • Distributor: Amazon Studios, Roadside Attractions

      • Production Co: Amazon Studios, Bona Fide Productions, Big Indie Pictures

      • Aspect Ratio: Flat (1.85:1)

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      Audience Reviews for The Only Living Boy in New York

      • Aug 25, 2017

        he Only Living Boy in New York may have made me hate New York. I was rolling my eyes at about every moment of this movie, not just because it wads cliché, not just because it confused the cliché with transcendent and relatable commentary, not just because the characters were aggressively loathsome and inauthentic, and not because it appears to be someone's idea of Graduate Lite (though, yes, these are all contributing factors). It's because the movie takes the easy way out at every route and wants to be congratulated for its artistic integrity. Thomas (Callum Turner) is a twenty-something who feels that New York City has lost what made it special. He's drifting through life, thinking about becoming a writer, and also trying to romance his best friend Mimi (Kiersey Clemons). His mother (Cynthia Nixon) self-medicates via dinner parties. His father (Pierce Brosnan) has a different approach, namely sleeping with another woman, Johanna (Kate Beckinsale). Thomas follows Johanna and makes his presence known to her. He convinces himself he's falling in love with her and impulsively chases her as a romantic option as well. I think the movie wants me to be charmed by its male lead, the young protagonist that looks like a lanky Richard Gere. This twerp made me so angry and he pretty much embodied a creepy blend of entitlement. He's tired of being in the friend zone with Mimi, but he keeps pushing, sneaking unauthorized kisses, and trying to wear down her defenses after she's told him no. She's annoyed that her friendship is by itself not good enough for him, and even though they had one "magic night," that he won't accept her repeated stances about not wanting to be together romantically. But what's a woman's ability to choose matter to Thomas, who we're constantly told from every other character in this stupid movie, is clever, bright, good, virtuous, and a prized talent in the making. The movie never shows you these things, never provides evidence of his talents or even his virtues, and so it becomes another series of empty gestures. He's just so captivating that all the women of New York can't help themselves around him. This wouldn't feel so tone deaf and backwards if the film did a better job of making Thomas feel like a living, breathing human being rather than some misguided, coming-of-age hipster creep. The premise here has promise, a wayward son who ends up having an affair with his father's mistress. That could work and devise plenty of palpable dramatic tension. Except because we never get to know Thomas beyond a superficial level, the affair only feels like another conquest of entitlement. Even a more interesting subtext, punishing his father for putting their family dynamic at risk, is only kept at a distance. What does Thomas learn about himself, his father, Johanna, or the world through his affair? If you cannot come up with a good answer then that means your plot point is lacking substance. Perhaps they just like the danger or the attention of one another, and yes Beckinsale (pick an Underworld movie) is an attractive woman so that's a plus for a horny young lad. Most frustratingly, nothing seems to be pressed by this affair. It pushes some eventual third act confrontations but Thomas and Johanna's tryst, for lack of a better term, just kind of lies there. It doesn't do much, which is strange considering what it involves. It feels like its real purpose is to engineer jealousy from Mimi, which is gross. Johanna is never more than another trophy for the most blithe boy in New York. The drama is pitched to a level that feels like it dances into self-parody, except it plays everything so unrelentingly serious. The narration begins by calling out life moments pulled from movie watching, but then it presents these very moments without any ounce of satire. We open with a New York dinner party where the attendees lament how the city has lost its soul ("The only soul left is Soul Cycle," someone says like the worst 1980s stand-up comedian). Oh no, CBGB's closed down. Oh no, there are Starbucks on multiple corners. Oh no, a city of ten million plus people is now only a commercialized hell, worry the rich elites from their ivory towers and their faulty memories of New York City being more pure when it was older. Not one character feels like an actual human being in this screenplay by Allan Loeb (Collateral Beauty). This is the kind of elitist, out-of-touch, artificial, self-involved characterization of New Yorkers that hacky conservative writers like to cling to when criticizing their big city targets. The actors do relatively fine work with what they're given, though special mention to Brosnan who tries his hardest to imbue notes of complexity in a character that, for 90 percent of the movie, is set up as a snide and disapproving patriarch. I don't want to give up on turner (Assassin's Creed) as an actor because the part did him no favors. Mostly I just felt sorry for them. Cynthia Nixon deserves better. The charming Kiersey Clemons (Dope) deserves better. Jeff Bridges is an executive producer, so he deserves what he gets as an alcoholic author/mentor with an out-of-nowhere ending that feels pulled from a soap opera. These characters are powerfully boring, shallow, and unappealing. At only 88 minutes long, The Only Living Boy in New York still feels punishing in length, protracted, and not worth the overall effort. Even the title makes me irritable. It's a reference to the Paul Simon song that you better believe will get played, one more desperate attempt to glom onto the legacy of The Graduate. The title refers to Thomas, our entitled hipster of a lead, but does that mean that he's the only one who really feels things, man, because the rest of us are just dead to the world, living our lives, and this hip young man just sees through all the nonsense of the day-to-day and, man, if only we could give him the platform he so rightly deserves then we'd all be better off. I wanted the cameraman to abandon the film and run a few corners and join a new set. It's New York City, by the law of averages, there has to be another film shoot a few blocks away. The Only Living Boy in New York is insufferable, haughty, pretentious, privileged navel-gazing masquerading as deep thought; it is smug New York hipster twaddle. Nate's Grade: D+

        nathan z Super Reviewer

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