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Mutual Appreciation
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Directed by Andrew Bujalski
Alan's (Justin Rice) band, the Bumblebees, has recently broken up after releasing an EP that got some attention. Alan has moved to Brooklyn, where he is trying to get solo gigs, and spending a lot of time with his old friend Lawrence (Andrew Bujalski, the film's writer/director) and Lawrence's girlfriend, Ellie (Rachel Clift). Alan quickly books a gig at hip Brooklyn club Northsix, and does a radio interview with Sara (Seung-Min Lee), during which he mentions that he doesn't even have a drummer. As luck would have it, Sara's brother, Dennis (Kevin Micka), is a drummer. Sara also makes it clear that she's attracted to Alan, which creates a problem when he decides he doesn't want to get involved with her. On the night of his gig, a friend of Alan's father with purported record-industry connections shows up, and invites Alan, Sara, and Dennis to his well-appointed apartment. Afterward, Alan drunkenly goes to a party where he was supposed to meet Lawrence and Ellie. As it turned out, they didn't make it, but a trio of women there (including one played by Kate Dollenmayer, who starred in Bujalski's debut feature, Funny Ha Ha), also drunk, have their own plans for him. Eventually, the unspoken attraction between Alan and Ellie comes to the fore. Mutual Appreciation was shot in black-and-white, and was a hit on the festival circuit before its theatrical release in September of 2006. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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hasn't rated it.
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Like his debut, Funny Ha Ha, Andrew Bujalski's Mutual Appreciation is a wryly amusing, expertly shot intimate character study with an undercurrent of genuine pain. It's clear from the opening frames that Bujalski knows his struggling-artist milieu perfectly. His sets (one place with no chairs, another with the mattress on the floor, Christmas lights around the mirror in a girl's apartment) and dialogue -- the way these characters engage each other with a dryly funny mix of solipsism and self-negation -- are spot on. In the lead, Justin Rice convincingly portrays Alan's endearing need to analyze everything that comes out of his mouth ("You're a beautiful woman -- or girl, whichever you prefer") and the rest of the cast -- including Bujalski himself, playing a slightly more appealing character than he did in Funny Ha Ha -- is equally adept. Every hem and haw of the dialogue is bracingly true-to-life. It seems improvised, even if it's mostly scripted. Bujalski's keen eye and ear -- his ability to capture every telling little detail of these people's lives in a seemingly offhand manner -- effortlessly puts across this engaging story of young, unfocused lives, in which it seems something amazing might happen at any moment, even if it usually doesn't. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 

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Karina
Karina
loved it.
poyboy
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loved it.
KevynKnox
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loved it.
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