Watch Bread and Butter For Free
Bread and Butter
On the brink of turning 30, endearing misfit AMELIA searches for signs to show her how to deal with her obsessive parents, her eccentric boss and her virginity.
Release : | 2014 |
Rating : | 5.9 |
Studio : | The Orchard, |
Crew : | Director, |
Cast : | Christine Weatherup Bobby Moynihan Lauren Lapkus Eric Lange Micah A. Hauptman |
Genre : | Drama Comedy |
Watch Trailer
Cast List
Related Movies
Reviews
Excellent, Without a doubt!!
This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.
The actors certainly put their backs into it, but it ain't funny and it doesn't entertain.
Loved it! Though, spoiler, the film contains neither bread nor butter. But it does contain a lot of charming and wonderful characters and dialogue. Special kudos to the smaller roles, especially that guy who played Lauren Lapkus' boyfriend. He should have gotten way more lines. The lead actress is really great, as is everybody. I wish suede dog ale was a real drink, but I don't think that it is. But I would drink it! And that music! Where's the soundtrack? Where? Send me the soundtrack! I wish this film would get released in theaters, because it's way better than most of the crap that's out there today, except Inside Out, that one I liked. Anyway, did I mention it was really great! A 10! See this now! I mean now! Rush out and see it...now!
I loved the characters in this film. I rooted for Amelia (Christine Weatherup) throughout - such a relatable, charming and real portrayal of a woman struggling to find herself. The character Daniel (Bobby Moynihan) was laugh-out-loud funny while also gaining the heartfelt empathy of the entire audience. And life coach Dr. Wellburn (Eric Lange) made me smile every time he was on screen. The film was beautifully shot - I enjoyed soaking in the locations as the story unfolded. Now - for the spoiler alerts (not all of these are spoilers, but I do mention plot points...). There were certain elements that left me a bit confused: why did Amelia set a timer when she masturbated? Was she masturbating because she was horny, or because she was trying to experience her very first orgasm (which perhaps wasn't achieved because she kept getting interrupted)? What was the significance of the green matchbox car? But I loved the "anti-rom-com" moral of the story: that a woman doesn't necessarily need to find a man to have a happy ending. Congratulations to the cast and crew!
If "Bread and Butter" is playing at a film festival near you, or it picks up a distributor as it hopes to do, then by all means seek it out. Seen at The Phoenix Film Festival, it's a wonderful take on a modern search for a (very late blooming) love life for it's leading lady. Perfectly cast, written, and filmed - and the soundtrack is fantastic, you'll be rooting for her even if neither of her first dating partners are the one for her. Still, she learns and you love her for it. Wonderfully so, no character here is black or white, good or bad, right or wrong - just like all of us, and that's what makes this film ring true. All of her problems are not nearly solved by the film's end, but you leave seeing her better equipped to face and eager to try all that life has to offer. Word of advice - don't see this with your mother. In lieu of a real boyfriend our heroine here makes ample use of the next best thing, but cinematically in a very discrete way.