Her new film, The Age of Adaline, about a woman whose physical appearance stops changing just before she hits 30, doesn't quite give her all that, but it's a significant step in the right direction. Movies revolving around
The Age of Adaline hints at, but never fully explores, a wealth of potentially mind-blowing and comical setups. Adaline's daughter, for example, is played by Ellen Burstyn, and the pair engage in a number of role-reversed arguments about assisted
“Imagine what it must be like if everywhere you went, ever, it was like it was your wedding,” I commented to one of my colleagues last night, at the after-party for the premiere of The Age of Adaline, as we watched Blake Lively pose for a scrum of
The Age of Adaline hints at, but never fully explores, a wealth of potentially mind-blowing and comical setups. Adaline's daughter, for example, is played by Ellen Burstyn, and the pair engage in a number of role-reversed arguments about assisted
Times critics on “The Water Diviner,” “The Age of Adaline,” and “Don't Think I've Forgotten.”