C'mon C'mon

audience Reviews

, 78% Audience Score
  • Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
    It's like being in the era after Saturday morning cartoons and eating cold plain oatmeal for breakfast with someone else's kid. Can someone just make some pancakes and turn on some cartoons? Mildly amusing for awhile then it just becomes a snore as nothing has developed, nothing is happening, and nothing has resolved... like cold, plain oatmeal.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    Great exterior cinematography for the most part, beautiful shots of the cities where the story takes place. The movie is a bit convoluted, using three main angles - interviews with children, the relationship between a brother and sister, and the relationship between the sister's son and the uncle - to make the same points over and over... and over. It could lose 40 minutes and be a much better film. By the end it is "OK, I get it, can this be over now?" Some unearned scenes near the end are a bit eye rolling and do not ring true. It is a very indulgent and flawed piece of film making. Might be better received by people who think it is super cool and amazing to have and raise children. What it shows really is how mundane and quotidian the daily family conflicts of life are. These points were made to me, but not sure the makers of this were shooting for that, probably more like "Isn't this touching and deep and philosophical and meaningful?" which I did not find it to be.
  • Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    I do think that its basically a cliché, well made and acted, but a cliché nonetheless which becomes more obvious as the movie goes along. That said, Phoenix is unusually subdued here which is the strongest aspect of the movie.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    My favorite movie to date. This movie has such a great message and the actors do amazing at portraying it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    This is an unusual and very engaging movie. It's a drama about an uncle and his intriguing 9-year-old nephew. It's a drama, but It has the feeling of a documentary. The acting is incredible by both Joaquin Phoenix and the boy—so real! The score, also, is unusual and at many times delightful. It reminded me of the Felini movie "8 1/2." But its tempo is faster, more appropriate for today. It's a work of art, and I highly recommend it.
  • Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    This is a sleeper. Woody Norman stole the show and, lamely wasn't listed as a star. Yes, Joaquin Phoenix was excellent as always but Woody takes the gold if for no other reason than the film was said to be unscripted and the kid was a total natural. Highly recommended.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    It had its sweet moments but it felt like it took itself too seriously and didn't have a real point.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    "A very accurate and beautifully told story about the peculiarities of raising a child as well as a wellmade depiction of the emotional entanglement of these loveable and curious beings. Really hits home when you were lucky enough to experience parenthood."
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    I kept falling asleep and finally gave up. To me it was very slow and boring and I could not see any reason to continue watching. The boy's character really got on my nerves. I bailed out with about 50 minutes left. The thought of 50 more minutes of conversation leading nowhere was too much.
  • Rating: 1.5 out of 5 stars
    Nice antinatalism film. Helpful demonstration of what a waste of time it is to spend your limited time on this earth worrying about and raising a child. You either do it properly and it consumes most of your life, or you do it poorly and thus shouldn't do it at all. A salient quote from the movie: "nobody knows what they're doing with these kids but they keep doing it". If only more people would stop to think "should we be doing this" before creating more children. But I have to give this film a poor rating because it missed a very important theme: how unhealthy people are creating unhealthy children who will suffer from that poor health. It results in a society full of diseased, poorly functioning people, resulting in the dystopia we're currently living in.