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‘All of Us Strangers’ Movie Review: Inspiring Movie | Movie Review News

That’s at the heart of this moving film about a middle-aged man dealing with the loss of his childhood, when the kind of obsession that rarely happens at this age enters his life.

That Adam (Scott) is gay only adds to his subconscious longing for a nostalgic family. The novel on which the film is loosely based was about a divorced man and woman who happen to be neighbors and strike up a friendship.

In Adam’s case, his neighbor is Harry (Mescal). They are the only occupants of one of the soulless skyscrapers that symbolize a metropolis (in this case London). The tower doesn’t even have a guard yet, due to the sense of isolation that literally envelops them.

Always a little high on one thing or another, Harry shows up at Adam’s house one quiet night after the fire alarm turns out to be a false alarm and offers him a “Japanese drink” and that’s all that remains. We shook hands. A little longer and it’s established that Adam is just as “queer” as he is.

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As Harry says, he prefers the word “queer” to remove the negative stereotypes that have come to be associated with gay people.

Harry seizes the opportunity and catches Adam. Adam, a writer, is stuck in the introduction to a screenplay he’s writing based on his own life. A box containing his childhood photos leads him to revisit his home in the outskirts of London. When he rings the bell, guess who is there besides his parents. He’s younger than he is now (played by Bell and Foy), which is the age they were when they died. Adam was 12 years old at the time.

What follows are some well-intentioned snippets of father and son, mother and son getting to know each other again, conversations about what they knew and what they didn’t know. What they don’t talk about, and what they said but didn’t know.

Adam’s mother’s surprise and innocent questions about what it means to be gay all these years later are beautifully conveyed by Foy. Her father admitted he had always suspected Adam was a bit “tutti frutti” (not in a derogatory sense), but she admitted he felt more comfortable not bringing up the issue. There is.

One night, what Adam remembers as their last night together, his adult self sneaks into the bed between them in his pajamas. Adam tells his mother how their life was going, including that they went to Disneyland together, that it kept raining, and that the three of them fought. Although she thinks she “could have been a better parent to her,” she said at the time that she wanted her son to grow up so she could “get a good night’s sleep.” It’s different from what I prayed for.

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It’s like the song “You’re Always in My Heart” plays when the three of them decorate the Christmas tree together, perhaps because Adam’s manly father liked doing the most “feminine” thing. right. Yes, maybe they didn’t love each other “as often as they could,” but this is a breakup with the knowledge that love can come knocking back – brandishing a questionable bottle. If there is, in the early hours of the morning.

“All of Us Strangers” movie cast: Andrew Scott, Paul Mescal
Director of “All of Us Strangers”: Andrew Hay
“All of Us Strangers” movie review: 3 stars

(Tag Translation) All Our Strangers