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Drama

May December

- Some roles are transformative.

Twenty years after their notorious tabloid romance gripped the nation, a married couple buckles under the pressure when an actress arrives to do research for a film about their past.

Release Date : 2023-11-16

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Gloria Sanchez ProductionsKiller FilmsMountainATaylor & DodgeProject Infinity

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : May/December

Cast

Natalie Portman

Character Name : Elizabeth

Original Name : Natalie Portman

Gender : Female

Julianne Moore

Character Name : Gracie

Original Name : Julianne Moore

Gender : Female

Charles Melton

Character Name : Joe Yoo

Original Name : Charles Melton

Gender : Male

Cory Michael Smith

Character Name : Georgie

Original Name : Cory Michael Smith

Gender : Male

Elizabeth Yu

Character Name : Mary Atherton-Yoo

Original Name : Elizabeth Yu

Gender : Female

Gabriel Chung

Character Name : Charlie Atherton-Yoo

Original Name : Gabriel Chung

Gender : Male

Piper Curda

Character Name : Honor Atherton-Yoo

Original Name : Piper Curda

Gender : Female

D.W. Moffett

Character Name : Tom Atherton

Original Name : D.W. Moffett

Gender : Male

Chris Tenzis

Character Name : Aaron

Original Name : Chris Tenzis

Gender : Male

Andrea Frankle

Character Name : Rhonda

Original Name : Andrea Frankle

Gender : Female

Mikenzie Taylor

Character Name : Molly

Original Name : Mikenzie Taylor

Gender : Male

Jocelyn Shelfo

Character Name : Sofia

Original Name : Jocelyn Shelfo

Gender : Female

Mike Lopez

Character Name : Ben

Original Name : Mike Lopez

Gender : Male

Joan Reilly

Character Name : Lydia

Original Name : Joan Reilly

Gender : Female

Charles Green

Character Name : Mr. Henderson

Original Name : Charles Green

Gender : Male

Christopher Nguyen

Character Name : Tyler Ko

Original Name : Christopher Nguyen

Gender : Male

Adam Woods

Character Name : Benny Kim / Boy Actor #3

Original Name : Adam Woods

Gender : Male

Lawrence Arancio

Character Name : Morris

Original Name : Lawrence Arancio

Gender : Male

Kelvin Han Yee

Character Name : Joe Sr.

Original Name : Kelvin Han Yee

Gender : Male

Julie Ivey

Character Name : Mrs. Labriola

Original Name : Julie Ivey

Gender : Female

Drew Scheid

Character Name : Cameron

Original Name : Drew Scheid

Gender : Male

Fatou Jackson

Character Name : Kimme

Original Name : Fatou Jackson

Gender : Male

Hans Obma

Character Name : Roberto

Original Name : Hans Obma

Gender : Male

Allie McCulloch

Character Name : TV Movie "Gracie"

Original Name : Allie McCulloch

Gender : Female

Evan Zhu

Character Name : TV Movie "Joe"

Original Name : Evan Zhu

Gender : Male

Hailey Wist

Character Name : Cassidy

Original Name : Hailey Wist

Gender : Male

James R Williams

Character Name : Tour Guide

Original Name : James R Williams

Gender : Male

Rocky Davis

Character Name : Young Actor

Original Name : Rocky Davis

Gender : Male

Hope Regina McElveen

Character Name : Valedictorian

Original Name : Hope Regina McElveen

Gender : Male

Derrick Butler

Character Name : The Principal

Original Name : Derrick Butler

Gender : Male

Zachary Branch

Character Name : Peter (uncredited)

Original Name : Zachary Branch

Gender : Male

Reviews

L

Lachlan Thiele

@lachlanthiele

2023-05-29

INT. MOCKING-MOORE - DAY May December is an excellent satire with incredibly dark themes at times. Portman's Elizabeth is an actress tasked with researching her next role, a movie based on the massively dramatised life of Julianne Moore's character. Moore and Portman shine in their roles, and both can create believable characters whilst still pushing the unbelievable humour and situations they are put in. Portman, mainly with her fascination with making an actual 'true-to-life' performance as Gracie, copies her quirks and tendencies, providing the audience with laughs. Primarily the humour lies in the dark aspects of the film. The funniest, without spoiling, Gracie's relationship with her husband. It continuously evolves over the film, and we finally reach a satisfying conclusion. It's interesting how the comedy-drama has the best character arcs out of all of the dramas that premiered at Cannes. Overall, May December lands on both feet, standing tall against the competition. Satirical, well-acted and entertaining. FADE OUT

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-10-19

This actually reminded me a little of "All About Eve" (1950) as television actress "Elizabeth" (Natalie Portman) arrives at the home of "Gracie" (Julianne Moore) about whom she is to star in a biopic. Initially welcoming of her and keen to help, we follow the changing dynamic as we learn that "Gracie" has quite a past, and that her husband of 20-odd years, "Joe" (Charles Melton) is considerably younger than her and there was quite a furore when they first hooked up that saw the older woman incarcerated. The more she finds out, the more involved "Elizabeth" becomes and the more immersed we all become in this quite compelling story of a taboo that rather broke a mould or two and is now surrounded by an atmosphere of hypocrisy, faux-friendships, and lemon drizzle cake. There is a strong, increasingly well delivered, competitiveness between these two women and Melton delivers quite strongly too as the young man who seems devoid of much purpose as he heads towards his forties. The script is quite tight, frequently potent and Todd Haynes's overall style of intimate direction genuinely encourages us to invest a little in one of the women - I didn't manage to invest in both, especially as the denouement loomed (perhaps just a little predictably). This film quite successfully presents us with quite an interesting character study that works both ways in their relationship - and is well worth a watch.

B

Brent Marchant

@Brent_Marchant

2023-11-24

In moviemaking, there’s subtlety, and then there’s subtlety carried too far. In the case of director Todd Haynes’s latest, the filmmaker unfortunately indulges himself far too much in the latter. This story of an actress (Natalie Portman) who visits a middle-aged sex offender (Julianne Moore) to prepare for a role she’s about to play in a movie about her subject’s life never seems to find a footing to stick with and explore. The narrative examines many different aspects of the back story behind the lives of the characters to be portrayed in this pending production without ever really resolving any of them by the time the credits roll. This includes not only the protagonist’s reasons for pursuing her once-underage husband (Charles Melton) – actions that got her jailed and made her fodder for countless tawdry tabloid cover stories – but also the nature of the actress’s real motivations in conducting such an excessively intense in-depth study of her character. In the process, virtually everyone comes across as somewhat unsavory, and, considering that the truth is never clearly revealed about any of them, it begs the question, why should we care about any of this? The film depicts all of this so subtly that it goes beyond nuance, veering into the realm of enigmatic, thereby further reinforcing the notion of why any of us should care. Ironically, these underplayed elements are in stark contrast to some rather obvious (and terribly trite) symbolism, particularly in images related to themes of transition and transformation. The picture’s inconsistent changes in tone don’t help, either, vacillating between allegedly serious drama and a seemingly underdeveloped desire to break out as an exercise in full-fledged camp (which, by the way, probably would have made this a much better offering). The script’s meandering flow and glacial pacing also don’t help, leaving viewers scratching their heads more often than not as to where this story is headed. In the end, all of the foregoing is ultimately quite unfortunate, because there’s definite potential in this project, but it’s never adequately defined and fleshed out. Leads Moore and (especially) Portman turn in admirable efforts to make this material fly, but they simply don’t have enough to work with to make that happen. While there appear to be allusions to themes like the difficulty involved in dealing with long-buried feelings and the fact that we may never be able to adequately grasp the truth behind them (either as outsiders looking in or as active participants in the midst of such dealings), the cryptic handling of those ideas undermines whatever meaningful messages or cinematic value they might have, making all of this seem like just such a big waste of time. Director Haynes has an impressive filmography behind him with such releases as “Poison” (1991), “Far From Heaven” (2002) and “Dark Waters” (2019), but, regrettably, “May December” certainly can’t be counted as part of that list.

R

r96sk

@r96sk

2024-01-22

Bit of a odd one. It gradually lost my attention a little the longer it went on, though overall it's a film I'd consider as interesting. I know of the real life story that 'May December' is "loosely" based upon, so it was intriguing early on to see how the film was going to tackle it. I think they did a good enough job with it all, the actress meeting the subject element makes the film more watchable than it otherwise would have been. Natalie Portman, Julianne Moore and Charles Melton are a great trio onscreen, each giving a noteworthy performance. Portman impressed me most, though Melton really does come strong across the second part of the movie. The rest of the cast do well, particularly solid casting of the main two characters' children. A very well made production, just one that did lose me slightly as it headed through its near 2hr run time - could've been shorter, imo. The main piano score, although excellent in itself, gets minorly annoyingly overused too. No hate though, I still enjoyed it and would recommend it.

J

justhappytobehere

@justhappytobehere

2024-02-09

Mostly a boring affair, with a few nice pieces of performance from time to time. Portman was never a good actor and she delivers another dead eyed performance. Moore was quite good and so was the man child. I guess check it out or not, it really doesn't matter.