Never Again

    Synopsis

    A man and a woman who have pledged never to fall in love again meet in a gay bar.

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    Cast

    • Jeffrey TamborChristopher
    • Jill ClayburghGrace
    • Caroline AaronElaine
    • Bill DukeEarl
    • Lily RabeTess
    • Michael McKeanAlex The Transvestite
    • Caitlin ClarkeAllison
    • Peter DinklageHarry Appleton
    • Sandy DuncanNatasha
    • Bill WeedenMr. Speedy

    Recommendations

    • 80

      Variety

      A hugely enjoyable romantic comedy that dares to suggest that love can bloom -- and, more important, hormones can rage -- after 50. Smart, sassy and slickly packaged.
    • 70

      Film Threat

      By turns touching, raucously amusing, uncomfortable, and, yes, even sexy, Never Again is a welcome and heartwarming addition to the romantic comedy genre; a pleasant surprise of a film that delivers so much more than its description leads one to expect.
    • 50

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Here's a case of two actors who do everything humanly possible to create characters who are sweet and believable, and are defeated by a screenplay that forces them into bizarre, implausible behavior.
    • 50

      Philadelphia Inquirer

      However insulting the script is to the formidable talents of Clayburgh and Tambor, they turn in Shinola performances.
    • 40

      TV Guide Magazine

      Kudos to writer-director Eric Schaeffer for doing a sexually graphic romantic comedy about fiftysomethings without being patronizing or cutesy. With both heart and guts, he honestly depicts how that moony-eyed, falling-in-love rush of endorphins is the same at 55 as it is at 15.
    • 40

      Los Angeles Times

      Youthful audiences won't be attracted to a love story between two 54-year-olds in the first place, and mature audiences will be turned off by the language, not necessarily out of prudishness, but out of its sheer crassness.
    • 25

      San Francisco Chronicle

      A wretched comedy about middle-aged romance.
    • 25

      New York Post

      Clayburgh is the most dignified thing about this dreadfully overwrought, often preposterous romantic comedy.