Synopsis
One day, driving aimlessly around the outskirts of town after a trivial domestic quarrel, a writer named Tomas accidentally hits and kills a child. Will he be able to move on?
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Cast
- James FrancoTomas Eldan
- Rachel McAdamsSara
- Charlotte GainsbourgKate
- Marie-Josée CrozeAnn
- Peter StormareEditor
- Patrick BauchauDad
- Julia Sarah StoneMina
- Lilah FitzgeraldYoung Mina
- Robert NaylorChristopher
- Jack FultonChristopher 5-8 yrs old
- 50
The Hollywood Reporter
The awkwardly titled Every Thing Will Be Fine seems more like a showcase for expressive camerawork pushing the limits of cinematography than anything else. Actors the caliber of James Franco and Charlotte Gainsbourg get the short end of the stick in this angst-ridden drama. - 50
The Playlist
This is one slow-ass "novel," in which no one ever cracks a joke and potentially melodramatic moments (a fairground ride collapse, the initial accident, a suicide attempt) are so painstakingly crafted to avoid splashiness that any momentum is killed. A little splashiness would have been most welcome. - 40
CineVue
Loaded with unremarkable statements on moral resolve and brimming with arrogance, this desultory study of grief and the need for an artist to suffer in order to create great art is as hollow and throwaway as the redundant platitude it derives its name from. - 40
Los Angeles Times
The visually stirring format proves unable to lift the story and performances out of a prevailing, airless stupor. - 30
Variety
While Wenders has argued intelligently in interviews for the merits of realizing character-driven drama in three dimensions, this isn’t the most helpful case-maker — not least because Norwegian writer Bjorn Olaf Johannessen’s screenplay has barely been rendered in two. - 25
IndieWire
It's possible that Every Thing Will Be Fine is understated to a fault, that excavating its deeper meanings is deliberately impeded rather than enabled by its gently casual vibe. - 25
Slant Magazine
The premise, of a terrible event unleavened by the easy out of someone being at fault, should be prime fodder for Wim Wenders's brand of poetic regret. - 25
The A.V. Club
The second interesting thing about Every Thing Will Be Fine is that it’s very bad, and that its bizarre throwaway lines and shrugged-off subplots brings to mind Tommy Wiseau instead of Douglas Sirk — an impression underscored by extensive, largely mismatched dubbing.