In this week's new releases, Jessica Chastain and James McAvoy star in “The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby,” which joins the twin chapters of a single narrative about a marriage in crisis. And despite its all-star cast, “This Is Where I Leave You” isn
This Is Where I Leave You's star-studded cast has "freewheeling" chemistry, but the storyline is predictable, writes Us Weekly's Mara Reinstein.
This week at the multiplex,we've got a mysterious labyrinth (“The Maze Runner,” starring Dylan O'Brien and Kaya Scodelario), a tense family reunion (“This Is Where I Leave You,” starring Jason Bateman and Tina Fey), a grizzled private investigator (“A
Just last week, The Skeleton Twins arrived in theaters, illustrating for moviegoers how a strong cast can overcome the limitations of mediocre material. By virtue of distribution karma, along comes This Is Where I Leave You, a similarly sitcomish study
Written by Jonathan Tropper from his novel about a dysfunctional Jewish family sitting shiva for its patriarch, “This Is Where I Leave You” is the year's first real crowd pleaser, a comedy-drama that presses all the right buttons but does so with