Summary
Pull up a chair. Better yet, pull up the most comfortable psychiatrist's couch out there. It's entirely necessary in dealing with the abominable personalities on display in Noah Baumbach's "Margot at the Wedding."
The director served notice with his remarkable 2005 hit "The Squid and the Whale," but this dialogue-heavy addition to his resume sees him falling just as fast as the antagonistic and neurotic folks taking the screen in this dark dud. While the characterization is there, nothing really transpires in "Margot at the Wedding." Spending 91 minutes with a dysfunctional family is the gist.See the full content of this document
Extract
Review: 'Margot at the Wedding'
When Margot (Nicole Kidman) -- in the process...
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