Synopsis
Once considered a teen prodigy, a recovering addict sobers up and tries to get her writing career back on track. She begins a relationship with a rising author known for his wartime memoirs.
Your Movie Library
Cast
- Lola KirkeTara
- Jemima KirkeAndrea
- Ben MendelsohnMartin
- Jamie DornanNick
- Alice EveIrene
- Jennifer GreyJosie
- Scott CaanEllis
- Billy CrystalDavid
- Kathryn ZennaDr. Cassie
- Sean EdwardsSteve
- 70
The Hollywood Reporter
The film's emotional intelligence gets it past the occasional false note, and the strength of its central performances keeps us engaged even when the characters themselves might not deserve our sympathy. - 70
Film Threat
With terrific pacing, knockout script, and actors who know what to do with it, Untogether quickly earned its place in the subgenre of romance worth watching. - 68
TheWrap
Though it’s millennial angst that drives the Andrea/Tara trajectories, Mendelsohn’s portrait of midlife fragility is a strong coloring in Untogether. - 63
RogerEbert.com
Despite being well shot, confidently written, and acted with a surfeit of commitment by most of its cast (Mendelsohn, who not for the first time reminded me uncomfortably of Trivago pitchman Tim Williams, is director Forrest’s ex-husband), I found the world it presented both smugly insular and overfamiliar. - 50
ReelViews
Watching Untogether, it’s easy to wish Forrest had elected to focus exclusively on Andrea and leave Tara as a background supporting character. - 40
Los Angeles Times
The Kirkes are attractive and intriguing actresses, Mendelsohn again proves one of the best screen actors around and Dornan looks great in scrubs. But it’s hard be sure exactly what Forrest is trying to say here and the film isn’t compelling or appealing enough to sufficiently care. - 40
New York Magazine (Vulture)
A hodgepodge of relationship movie clichés occasionally redeemed by a game cast. - 30
The New York Times
There’s scarcely a behavior or line reading in this exasperating relationship drama that doesn’t feel like affectation. Fraudulence might be a plot point, but only the writer and director, Emma Forrest, knows why it has to permeate the entire movie.