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Drama

The Tender Bar

- Between the ones who love you and the ones who leave you is the journey of a lifetime.

JR is a fatherless boy growing up in the glow of a bar where the bartender, his Uncle Charlie, is the sharpest and most colorful of an assortment of quirky and demonstrative father figures. As the boy’s determined mother struggles to provide her son with opportunities denied to her — and leave the dilapidated home of her outrageous if begrudgingly supportive father — JR begins to gamely, if not always gracefully, pursue his romantic and professional dreams, with one foot persistently placed in Uncle Charlie’s bar.

Release Date : 2021-12-17

Language :EnglishRussian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Amazon StudiosSmoke House PicturesGrand Illusion Films

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Ben Affleck

Character Name : Charlie Maguire

Original Name : Ben Affleck

Gender : Male

Tye Sheridan

Character Name : JR Maguire

Original Name : Tye Sheridan

Gender : Male

Daniel Ranieri

Character Name : Young JR Maguire

Original Name : Daniel Ranieri

Gender : Male

Lily Rabe

Character Name : Dorothy Maguire

Original Name : Lily Rabe

Gender : Female

Christopher Lloyd

Character Name : Grandpa Maguire

Original Name : Christopher Lloyd

Gender : Male

Max Martini

Character Name : The Voice, JR's father

Original Name : Max Martini

Gender : Male

Rhenzy Feliz

Character Name : Wesley

Original Name : Rhenzy Feliz

Gender : Male

Briana Middleton

Character Name : Sidney

Original Name : Briana Middleton

Gender : Female

Max Casella

Character Name : Chief

Original Name : Max Casella

Gender : Male

Sondra James

Character Name : Grandma Maguire

Original Name : Sondra James

Gender : Female

Michael Braun

Character Name : Bobo

Original Name : Michael Braun

Gender : Male

Matthew Delamater

Character Name : Joey D

Original Name : Matthew Delamater

Gender : Male

Ivan Leung

Character Name : Jimmy

Original Name : Ivan Leung

Gender : Male

Danielle Ranieri

Character Name : Aunt Ruth

Original Name : Danielle Ranieri

Gender : Female

Kate Avallone

Character Name : Kathy

Original Name : Kate Avallone

Gender : Female

Mark Boyett

Character Name : Sidney's Dad

Original Name : Mark Boyett

Gender : Male

Quincy Tyler Bernstine

Character Name : Sidney's Mom

Original Name : Quincy Tyler Bernstine

Gender : Female

Ezra Knight

Character Name : Professor Van Dyke

Original Name : Ezra Knight

Gender : Male

David Carl

Character Name : School Psychologist

Original Name : David Carl

Gender : Male

Shannon Collis

Character Name : Pat

Original Name : Shannon Collis

Gender : Female

Keira Jo Lassor

Character Name : Kathy's Daughter

Original Name : Keira Jo Lassor

Gender : Male

Jennifer C. Johnson

Character Name : Mrs. Williams

Original Name : Jennifer C. Johnson

Gender : Female

Michael Steven Costello

Character Name : NYT Editor

Original Name : Michael Steven Costello

Gender : Male

Kate Middleton

Character Name : NYT Personnel Woman

Original Name : Kate Middleton

Gender : Female

Jackson Damon

Character Name : NYT Copyboy

Original Name : Jackson Damon

Gender : Male

Caroline Bergwall

Character Name : NYT Copygirl

Original Name : Caroline Bergwall

Gender : Male

Daniel Washington

Character Name : Officer James

Original Name : Daniel Washington

Gender : Male

Jenny Eagan

Character Name : Chief's Wife

Original Name : Jenny Eagan

Gender : Female

Steve Gagliastro

Character Name : Other Customer

Original Name : Steve Gagliastro

Gender : Male

Annabella Valle

Character Name : Aunt Ruth's Kid #1

Original Name : Annabella Valle

Gender : Female

Clara Kelly

Character Name : Aunt Ruth's Kid #2

Original Name : Clara Kelly

Gender : Female

Meara Mahoney Gross

Character Name : Aunt Ruth's Kid #3

Original Name : Meara Mahoney Gross

Gender : Female

Ron Livingston

Character Name : Future JR Maguire (voice only)

Original Name : Ron Livingston

Gender : Male

Jack Baumrind

Character Name : Kid in Classroom (uncredited)

Original Name : Jack Baumrind

Gender : Male

Julia Bechler

Character Name : Dickens Bar Regular (uncredited)

Original Name : Julia Bechler

Gender : Male

Keith R Beck

Character Name : Yale Student (uncredited)

Original Name : Keith R Beck

Gender : Male

Alissa Bourne

Character Name : Dickens Bar Patron (uncredited)

Original Name : Alissa Bourne

Gender : Female

Reviews

R

r96sk

@r96sk

2022-03-16

So very plain. To be honest: I found 'The Tender Bar' to be a bore. I felt like I had seen this film before, such is the predictable and monotonous nature of the story. It almost felt like a (poorer) rerun of 2020's 'Hillbilly Elegy'. I will say, though, that Ben Affleck gives a very good performance in this, to the point that I actually would've liked to have seen a story revolving around him and his character - as opposed to who this 2021 flick is about. Aside from Affleck, I didn't care for any of the other performances and therefore any of the other characters. It's not even a bad film, it's just so, so boring - for me, anyway.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2022-03-27

It's not often I find myself writing this, but Ben Affleck is comfortably the best thing about this otherwise rather lacklustre adaptation of JR Moehringer's autobiographical coming of age tale. It depicts the story of his childhood - through the eyes of the engaging young Daniel Ranieri - before he heads to Yale in the guise of Tye Sheridan. The first half hour, maybe, is quite entertaining. This young lad living with his mother (his selfish father is estranged from them, living the mobile life of a late night radio talk show host) in the home of his mildly eccentric grandfather (Christopher Lloyd) and their home is a lively, buzzing environment in which the youngster thrives. Chief amongst the residents is his charismatic, worldly-wise uncle "Charlie" (Affleck) who runs a local bar populated with a decent, working-class clientele who take to the young man and encourage his obvious academic talents. That half hour peters out, though, and the rest of the film is really a rather uninspiring story of a young man, his "first love", a youth who is looking for some sort of positive male "role model". I find Sheridan a rather sterile actor. Sure, he is pretty, but he doesn't ever stand out with his performances. They are all just a little bit by the numbers, and here is no different. He speak words of passion, but his acting conveys none of that adequately on screen. The soundtrack is left to do much of the heavy lifting when it comes to dialogue, and it feels longer than the 1¾ hours it takes to watch. I am glad I watched it - on a big screen in London with just one other person - but I don't think I would ever bother watching it again.

T

tmdb28039023

@tmdb28039023

2022-09-03

This film, written by William Monahan and directed by George Clooney on autopilot is yet another shallow glimpse into the formative years of an wannabe writer. This is hardly virgin territory, having already been thoroughly covered by the likes of Unstrung Heroes, Almost Famous, and Neil Simon’s ‘Eugene Trilogy’, to mention but a few examples. J.R. Maguire (Daniel Ranieri, Tye Sheridan), based on American novelist and journalist J. R. Moehringer, grows up in an eccentric family straight from Central Casting — we have the long-suffering single mother, the deadbeat dad, the curmudgeonly grandfather with a secret heart of gold, and the cool uncle who doubles as a father figure. The only thing, and it’s nothing to sneeze at, that The Tender Bar has going for it is that the grandfather and uncle are played by Christopher Lloyd Ben Affleck. “When you’re 11, you want an Uncle Charlie,” says J.R. I can’t disagree, especially considering that Uncle Charlie owns The Dickens Bar, its shelves filled with booze and books. Now, this and no other is the movie they should have made: one wherein Ben Affleck is a self-taught philosopher barman who doles out drinks and folk wisdom in equal parts, and Christopher Lloyd is his best customer. Unfortunately what we have here is such hackneyed material that Affleck’s and Lloyd’s combined efforts can hardly raise it above the commonplace (how’s this for a cliché: to illustrate the fickleness of J.R.’S stereotypically unattainable romantic interest, the soundtrack breaks into into Paul Simon’s “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover”), whence it crumbles back whenever they’re off-screen. It doesn’t help either that the potential shown by Sheridan in Mud and Joe apparently didn’t survive the actor’s puberty. In these two films Sheridan could boast of going toe-to-toe with Matthew McConaughey and Nic Cage; here Affleck acts circles around him. Worst of all, we hear from a number of people how good a writer J.R. is, but we’re never given any concrete reason for that — only platitudes, such as invoking some ineffable je ne sais quoi or just unilaterally deciding that “You are a writer the moment you say you are.” What he fails to realize is that talking business and meaning business are two very different things.