
Why Him Trailer Deutsch Inhaltsverzeichnis
Why Him Trailer () 1Top Schauspieler: Bryan Cranston, James FrancoOriginaltitel: Why Him?Produktion: James Franco, John Hamburg. - Offizieller "Why Him?" Trailer Deutsch German | Abonnieren ➤ omz-foundry.eu | (OT: Why Him?) Movie #Trailer | Kinostart: 12 Jan Why Him? (englisch für Warum er?) ist eine US-amerikanische Filmkomödie von John Hamburg aus dem Jahr In den Hauptrollen sind James Franco und.

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Vorgestellte Kanäle. Regie: John Hamburg, Steve Gehrke. Laird wiederum versucht, seinen potentiellen Schwiegervater mit allen Mitteln zu beeindrucken, um Stephanie doch noch heiraten zu können. John Hamburg. Auch Stephanies Beteuerungen, dass Laird im Grunde ein netter Mensch sei und er sie glücklich mache, können Ned nicht umstimmen. Zusammen mit seiner Frau Barb und seinem jährigen Sohn Scotty plant Emilia Galotti, seine Tochter Stephanie, welche an der Stanford University studiert, zu besuchen. Castle Rock Trailer - Admiring Deutsch 2 - Trailer. First they loved him, now they loathe him. NTL Movieclips Trailers. Noch schlimmer wird es allerdings, als Laird ihn um seinen Segen bittet, denn er möchte seiner Tochter einen Heiratsantrag machen. Als die Familie dort eintrifft, stellen Viktor Saalfeld erstaunt fest, dass Stephanie mit einem millionenschweren Jungunternehmer namens Laird Oa Serie zusammen ist. Winston also revealed why the home is so meaningful to him, Ard Podcast JordanPeele encouraged him to be in Us, and more!
View All. Top Box Office. First Name. Edit page. Forgot your password? Technical Specs. User Reviews. Malaysia Gazette TV. Castle Rock Trailer - Staffel 2 - Trailer. Er Bayern Dortmund Free Tv Neds Druckerei, um Tolle Serien auch die aufgelaufenen Schulden begleichen zu können. Ansichten Lesen Bearbeiten Quelltext bearbeiten Versionsgeschichte. Am Weihnachtsabend erhält er so Neds Einverständnis, Stephanie zu heiraten. Entertaiment ET. Let's get your review verified. Fandango AMCTheatres. More Info. Submit By opting to have your ticket verified for this movie, you are allowing us to check the email address associated with your Rotten Tomatoes account against an email address associated with a Fandango ticket purchase for the same movie.
How did you buy your ticket? View All Videos 4. View All Photos Movie Info. While there, he meets his biggest nightmare: her well-meaning but socially awkward boyfriend, Laird James Franco.
Even though Laird is a multimillionaire, Ned disapproves of his freewheeling attitude and unfiltered language. His panic level escalates even further when he learns that Laird plans to ask for Stephanie's hand in marriage.
John Hamburg. John Hamburg , Ian Helfer. Mar 14, James Franco Laird Mayhew. Bryan Cranston Ned Fleming.
Zoey Deutch Stephanie Fleming. Megan Mullally Barb Fleming. Griffin Gluck Scotty Fleming. Keegan-Michael Key Gustav.
Adam DeVine Tyson Modell. Zack Pearlman Kevin Dingle. Casey Wilson Missy Pederman. Cedric the Entertainer Lou Dunne.
John Hamburg Director. John Hamburg Screenwriter. Ian Helfer Screenwriter. Shawn Levy Producer. Ben Stiller Producer. Jonah Hill Producer.
Dan Levine Producer. Georgia Kacandes Executive Producer. Kris Kachikis Cinematographer. William Kerr Film Editor.
December 28, Rating: 2. December 23, Rating: C Full Review…. December 23, Rating: 2. December 22, Full Review….
July 2, Full Review…. April 30, Full Review…. August 28, Rating: 2. July 20, Rating: 2. View All Critic Reviews Jun 29, I don't know why, when reviewing Bryan Cranston movies, or at least ones in which he is the main character, or one of them at least, I feel the need to point out my pure love for the series that made him most famous.
Malcolm In The Middle. Just kidding, just kidding. Don't get me wrong, I also love Malcolm and I think Bryan is great there as this lovable buffoon.
No, that's not the show I mean. Okay, seriously now. I'm obviously talking about Breaking Bad. Breaking Bad, in my honest opinion, is the best television series that I have ever had the pleasure of watching.
My fandom of the show is so much that I bought the first two seasons on DVD, purchased the third one on iTunes immediately after finishing the second season because I was sad and wanted more.
Fourth and fifth seasons I watched on Netflix. And, after that, that same Christmas must have been I bought the Blu-ray box set of the entire series and proceeded to watch the series all over again.
So you could say that I'm a massive fan. And I am. Cranston himself was a revelation on the show. I always knew he was really fucking good because of his work in Malcolm, but Breaking Bad opened my eyes to how amazing this guy is as a dramatic actor.
There's very, very few people in this world that are as effective at they are at comedic acting as they are at dramatic roles.
Cranston is one of them. Some actors may be able to do it well, but most actors excel at one or the other. It's rare to find someone who succeeds completely at both.
And, realistically speaking, he is the reason that I decided to watch this movie as a result of my Cinemax free trial on Amazon Prime.
I was looking for something to watch and I was settling on either Geostorm or Split which will probably be tonight's choice.
I kept browsing until this popped up and I picked it immediately upon finding that it was available to me. Actually, scratch that.
The point is that this movie has a concept that has been utilized to death and, honestly, there's nothing really new that can be told within this concept of the disapproving father and his daughter's crazy, free-spirited boyfriend.
So many movies out there like this and, quite frankly, there didn't need to be another one, but there is, so here we are. What is there to say about this movie?
That might not sound like much but, trust me, with those four, you have a strong cast to help carry your script through its weaker moments.
Having said that, the scripting isn't exactly great. I will say, though, that kudos to this being an R-rated movie. I think that allows them more creative leeway in terms of its gags than they would get if it was a PG affair.
There's nothing wrong with a good, raunchy comedy every now and then. Not saying that this is good, but what I mean is that sometimes people associate these raunchy comedies with low-brow humor and that isn't always the case.
Superbad, as an example, has a lot of raunchy humor, but it's also a flick with a lot of heart and actual character development. As far as this movie is concerned, however, it is a bit of a mixed bag.
Certainly this is a very watchable movie and you could say I even enjoyed myself while not thinking of it as good, mind you. Mood definitely had a lot to play with that, because I was in a surprisingly good mood.
Life has been difficult these past 3 weeks, with what happened to a loved one no one died , but we're at the point where we're just gonna deal with it and, again, it's something that there's a solution for.
It might have been avoidable and everything, but there is a solution and the loved one in question seems to be committed to doing what is necessary.
Everybody's in good spirits, so, in spite of everything, the worst case scenario has also yielded the best case scenario, if that makes sense.
But, regardless, the point is that I was in a good mood and I'm more receptive and forgiving. I just like the tone of the movie, it's obvious that everyone had a blast filming this and that helps.
Having said that, however, the scripting is definitely a lot more hit than miss. I just think that, if it wasn't for the cast, it would have gotten a slightly lower score.
Ned's the CEO of his own printing business. But, with everyone taking their business online, he's struggling. Of course, he has kept all of this from his wife.
Ned is also close to his daughter, who's studying at Stanford. She invites him, and her family, to meet her boyfriend, who's the creator of this app development team.
He's rich as fuck, naturally. He's eccentric and very foul-mouthed. Again, typical father vs fiancee stuff. Laird wishes to bond with Ned, so everything can be copacetic between the two.
Plus Laird wants Ned's blessing to marry Stephanie, his daughter duh. This is when the 'competition' between the two starts, with Ned trying to constantly undermine Laird at every turn and questioning his daughter's decision to be with him.
He also feels that Laird is sucking his family in and turning them in his Laird's favor. Barb, Ned's wife, warms up to him. Scotty loves Laird. And Stephanie drops college to be the president of this non-profit organization that Laird set-up.
So everyone in his family seems to be "turning" against him for Laird. Blah, blah, blah, Ned realizes that he probably shouldn't interfere in his daughter's life, pisses said daughter off, blah, blah, blah, reconciliation with Laird, and his daughter, and everything ends up all peachy.
You've seen these movies and, really, this is by design, but the focus is always on the people feuding and not really the person they're feuding for.
Stephanie is not really a character, she's just a plot device disguised as a character. I mean, Stephanie does bring up some good points that Laird and Ned made it all about themselves and fight over her as if she was their property, but she's still not a real character.
There is some kernel of truth in what Ned said, though, that not only was all this her having a boyfriend, leaving college and getting married sprung on him at the last minute, but he also felt like he was losing his daughter way too quickly and that he felt like he didn't know her anymore.
Not that that justifies their actions, of course, but you can see why, if this were real life, someone would be a little hesitant to, not necessarily go along with it because, ultimately, it's not their life, but to accept the change.
Sometimes you feel you know someone that lives under your own roof and then you find out something about them that you would never have expected.
That is multiplied exponentially when that same person lives on their own for a few years. When you see them again, if they're a friend as an example, they might seem like a completely different person.
So there is something to that. As far as comedy is concerned, it's not great. The best scene, to me, is when Barb is high and she's down to fuck, but Ned's not having any of it.
She tries to force him to perform oral on her. Also the scene with the the Japanese toilet that squirts water into your asshole so you don't have to wipe.
Both Ned and Barb enjoy the water a little too much. Ned accidentally, Barb, though, very much on purpose as a result of Ned not having sex with her when she was high.
Honestly, there's not many people that call pull a scene like this off. Just because of how preposterous it is. For example, Kevin James, who's a terrible comedic actor, would just overreact and turn it into a lame slapstick.
Cranston's reaction is a little more subtle. This is what those years portraying Walter White were building to, where he can subtly pretend that the water spraying into his ass is pleasurable.
I don't know what else to say, this movie is what this movie is. Young collage student falls for an eccentric tech billionaire, who through the course of the movie makes some questionable choices regarding his actions around her family over a holiday weekend.
The trailer would have you thinking you were in for a grand competition between James Franco and Bryan Cranston, but the movie makes efforts to prove that is not what is going on here.
As the movie goes on it become more and more difficult to ignore what feels like a last minute addition of a Christmas setting by the studio to draw some of the holiday crowd, or the incredibly over the top use of dirty language.
That is one of the worst advents in comedy movies over the last 25 or so years. Constant use of bad words do not make movies funnier and kids cursing does not count as good comedy.
Why Him also suffers from the problem of not knowing what it is exactly about. About halfway through the movie, almost every character has proved them to be self centered or downright dis likable in some way shape or form, and they run into the problem where none of the easily predictable outcomes is really a good ending for the characters.
This turns the ending into a mess where none of the emotional beats are even close to being well executed or satisfying. Other than the two lead roles, none of the characters get much to do.
They seem to be missing for whole chunks of the movie and then brought back to help make a bad gag work and then we head back to the two leads.
James Franco is actually pretty good here for about as much as he could do. His character is unlikable when he needs to be and can steal your heart in the next scene.
To be fair this is basically the same role Franco has been doing for the last 3 years, but if it ain't broke don't fix it.
Bryan Cranston is a funny dude, his role as Dr. Tim Whatley on Seinfeld is a beautifully subtle comedy role and then he really knocked it out of the park as the Dad in Malcolm in the Middle.
He does not get to use any of the real comedic talent he has accrued in his career, rather being stuck to being the incredibly straight guy who for some reason has a "crotch chop" as his signature bowling move.
I can't in good conscious recommend it, but I am sure there are people out there who like it and I can understand why.
There is actually a decent foundation for an interesting comedy movie here, and I don't know what exactly happened along the way but Why Him? Not to mention the movie is way too long, at 1 hour and 51 minutes you are probably better off just leaving 20 minutes early and making up an incredibly generic movie ending, because trust me it will probably be better than what was actually filmed.
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A holiday gathering threatens to go off the rails when Ned Fleming realizes that his daughter's Silicon Valley millionaire boyfriend is about to pop the question.
Director: John Hamburg. Added to Watchlist. From metacritic. For people who ask what to watch. Must See Films - Chosen by film directors loving meaningful and entertaining stories, but no blood.
Romantiske -ish Filmer jeg skal se med Anitra. Share this Rating Title: Why Him?
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