/h9USMzm43BZyUXc45OZAPlPBUjZ.jpg
DramaThriller

Acrimony

- Hell hath no fury.

Faithful wife Melinda, who is tired of standing by her devious husband Robert, is enraged when it becomes clear she has been betrayed. That's when she lost it, and now she cannot let it go.

Release Date : 2018-03-30

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Tyler Perry StudiosLionsgate

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Tyler Perry's She's Living My LifeTyler Perry’s Acrimony

Cast

Taraji P. Henson

Character Name : Melinda Moore Gayle

Original Name : Taraji P. Henson

Gender : Female

Lyriq Bent

Character Name : Robert Gayle

Original Name : Lyriq Bent

Gender : Male

Crystle Stewart

Character Name : Diana

Original Name : Crystle Stewart

Gender : Female

Danielle Nicolet

Character Name : Sarah

Original Name : Danielle Nicolet

Gender : Female

Ptosha Storey

Character Name : Brenda

Original Name : Ptosha Storey

Gender : Female

Jazmyn Simon

Character Name : June

Original Name : Jazmyn Simon

Gender : Female

Kendrick Cross

Character Name : Kalvin

Original Name : Kendrick Cross

Gender : Male

Nelson Estevez

Character Name : Casey

Original Name : Nelson Estevez

Gender : Male

Jay Hunter

Character Name : Devon

Original Name : Jay Hunter

Gender : Male

Ajiona Alexus

Character Name : Young Melinda

Original Name : Ajiona Alexus

Gender : Female

Antonio Madison

Character Name : Young Robert

Original Name : Antonio Madison

Gender : Male

Bresha Webb

Character Name : Young Brenda

Original Name : Bresha Webb

Gender : Female

Racquel Bianca John

Character Name : Young June

Original Name : Racquel Bianca John

Gender : Female

Shavon Kirksey

Character Name : Young Diana

Original Name : Shavon Kirksey

Gender : Female

Terayle Hill

Character Name : Young Devon

Original Name : Terayle Hill

Gender : Male

Jarvis Shaffer

Character Name : Young Casey

Original Name : Jarvis Shaffer

Gender : Male

Moses Jones

Character Name : Young Kalvin

Original Name : Moses Jones

Gender : Male

Angelique Valentine

Character Name : Young Sarah

Original Name : Angelique Valentine

Gender : Female

Denise Woods

Character Name : Therapist (voice)

Original Name : Denise Woods

Gender : Female

Douglas Dickerman

Character Name : Mr. Prescott

Original Name : Douglas Dickerman

Gender : Male

Katie Carpenter

Character Name : Carly

Original Name : Katie Carpenter

Gender : Female

Shamea Morton

Character Name : Audra

Original Name : Shamea Morton

Gender : Female

Jason Vail

Character Name : Franklin

Original Name : Jason Vail

Gender : Male

John Schmedes

Character Name : Judge #1

Original Name : John Schmedes

Gender : Male

Bob Lanoue

Character Name : (Melinda's) Attorney

Original Name : Bob Lanoue

Gender : Male

Alonzo Ward

Character Name : Neighbor

Original Name : Alonzo Ward

Gender : Male

Scott Deal

Character Name : Melvin

Original Name : Scott Deal

Gender : Male

Leonard R. Butler

Character Name : Dean

Original Name : Leonard R. Butler

Gender : Male

George Bryant II

Character Name : Pastor

Original Name : George Bryant II

Gender : Male

Je Nie Fleming

Character Name : Lawyer

Original Name : Je Nie Fleming

Gender : Male

Lela Dawn Barrett

Character Name : Judge #2

Original Name : Lela Dawn Barrett

Gender : Male

Karen Beyer

Character Name : Mrs. Hilderbran

Original Name : Karen Beyer

Gender : Female

Lycan Scott

Character Name : Wedding Planner

Original Name : Lycan Scott

Gender : Male

Remington Steele

Character Name : Steward

Original Name : Remington Steele

Gender : Male

C.C. Ice

Character Name : Stewardess

Original Name : C.C. Ice

Gender : Female

Reviews

G

Gimly

@Ruuz

2021-06-23

If you had just copped the line notes on _Acrimony_, you could be forgiven for assuming this was your average Lifetime movie faire, but _Acrimony_ allows for its core characters a complexity that you would never find in that sort. There are absolutely imperfections in the movie, most of which I assume come to us from budgetary constraints, and even those aside, _Acrimony_ is still not exactly breaking moulds or blazing trail - but it is decent, and not exactly like anything I personally have seen before. _Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._

T

tmdb28039023

@tmdb28039023

2022-09-03

It’s always a bad sign when the first thing we see in a movie is the dictionary definition of the title. It’s bad because it assumes that we’re too ignorant to know what the word means — in this case, ‘acrimony,’ which I would say ranks lowish in the Hemingway-Faulkner scale —, and why would we want to watch a film that underestimates, sight unseen, our intelligence? Moreover, if writer/director Tyler Perry deems his chosen title to be so obscure that he had best not even risk giving us the benefit of the doubt, why didn’t he pick another, more accesible word — one that he feels is common enough to be part of our obviously limited vocabularies? Anyway, Acrimony is the strange tale of crazy-ass Melinda (Taraji P. Henson), who puts up with deadbeat husband Robert Gayle (Lyriq Bent) for 18 years; when she finally divorces him, his cockamamie invention — a self-charging battery that he calls “Gayle Force Wind” — becomes an overnight sensation (well, not so much 'overnight,’ but you get the idea), turning Robert into a wealthy man, and Melinda into a major cunt who feels he owes her everything he’d promised her way back when — including a yacht that he was going to call the “Mrs. Gayle.” Why the “Mrs. Gayle”? I mean, what’s wrong with the 'Melinda’? But more on that later. Melinda and Robert met in college. He helps her study for a History test, which she fails nonetheless; no wonder, considering Robert is actually a Mechanical Engineering student. Clearly, he’s full of crap, and she should know better — nay, she does know better; not with the benefit of hindsight (the movie is told in flashback, complete with a voice-over narration; another very bad sign), but right then and there, or at least she makes it sound that way: “You ever get that feeling when a man is telling you something, and you know it’s [expletive deleted], but you just go with it? … Well, I knew this was [expletive deleted], and I tried to go with it.” The question is, why does she keep going with it? To quote Stephen King, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me three times, shame on both of us.” Having said that, is Robert even fooling her, really? Melinda’s mother passes away (we hear about her mother exactly two times; the second time, which follows 20 seconds after the first, is the announcement of her death). Robert comes to the wake, briefly pays his respects, and then leaves. Melinda catches up to him, offers him a ride to his house — actually an RV —, and once there, invites herself in. But when they end up having sex, this is what she has to say about it: “My mother wasn’t even cold in the ground yet, and there I was. What kind of man takes advantage of a girl’s grief, huh? I’ll tell you. A low-life maggot of a mother[expletive deleted], that’s who. He had to know that grief can leave you open to not knowing yourself at all.” “He had to know that grief can leave you open to not knowing yourself at all.” But did he really have to know that, though? Does anyone, for that matter? Is that even a knowable thing? Later on, Robert is cheating on Melinda in his RV; Melinda drives over there and T-bones the RV, flipping it over. She bears the brunt of the impact, though: “I slammed my body against the steering wheel so hard. Internal bleeding. And worse, ruptured ovaries. A full hysterectomy, and I wasn’t even 21 years old. Children, never.” Even if this were possible — and given the location of the ovaries in the female body, I doubt it very much —, how exactly would it be his fault? Also, ever heard of adoption, surrogacy, etc.? There are several other ways that Robert and Melinda could have raised a family after she forgives him and marries him (which she of course does). Leaving out the impossible ovary-busting incident, this could be good material for a farce; for some reason I keep picturing something like Carl Reiner’s The Jerk. The only comedy here, however, is unintentional; for example, when Robert remarries and at last buys the yacht of his dreams, he stills names it the “Mrs. Gayle” like he promised Melinda — she’s no longer Mrs. Gayle, but the name is nevertheless technically correct. Now, if Perry had any sense of humor to speak of, Robert would have christened the boat the “Mrs. Gayle 2.”