No Stranger Than Love

    No Stranger Than Love
    2015

    Synopsis

    What is stranger than the big hole that opens up in Lucy Sherrington's living room floor? As it turns out, love.

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      Cast

      • Alison BrieLucy Sherrington
      • Justin ChatwinRydell Whyte
      • Colin HanksClint Coburn
      • Mark ForwardVernon Paulson
      • Christopher CordellRandy Whyte
      • Lisa BerryFay
      • Justin BigelliFootball Captain
      • Robin BrûléVerna Coburn
      • Mason CardwellGuy in Bar
      • Marium CarvellWoman #1

      Recommendations

      • 50

        The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

        The script wants desperately to be about the unfathomable nature of love. The best it can deliver is this: “Love is loving someone who is covered in snot.” It’s all quirked up, but goes nowhere.
      • 38

        Movie Nation

        It aims for the heart, but misses. It reaches for existential but never manages much more than “twee.”
      • 38

        RogerEbert.com

        Feels like it probably began life as a one-act play, set almost entirely in Lucy’s living room and with a small cast of characters. It has that feeling of a piece that needed a bit more workshopping to discern its purpose and, like a lot of independent cinema that feels like it has theatrical origins, never becomes convincingly cinematic.
      • 33

        The A.V. Club

        No Stranger Than Love offers an accidental lesson: Attempts to write poetry ought to be preceded by attempts to read it and, preferably, understand it.
      • 33

        IndieWire

        By the time the entire town discovers that Clint is trapped in a weird hole and Lucy has fallen for Chatwin’s Rydell White, No Stranger Than Love picks up some serious steam, balancing its bizarre tone with actual charm. Sadly, however, it’s too late to pull the production out of its own gaping void: The inability to treat its characters with respect.
      • 30

        Los Angeles Times

        Few will likely embrace the insufferably chirpy, high-concept rom-com that struggles to stretch a mighty shallow premise into a feature-length proposition.
      • 30

        The Hollywood Reporter

        It’s not a problem there’s a hole, as it were, in the common-sense logic of the film’s world; it’s that there’s a big, gaping hole where the illogic should be, a whole lot of nothing where there should be metaphor, playfulness, all that juicy, enigmatic, magical-realism stuff that helps films like Being John Malkovich and its many knockoffs become fodder for film-studies essays.
      • 25

        New York Post

        The considerable comic talents of Alison Brie (“Community”) are squandered by this exhaustingly quirky indie romance.