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XX/XY, 2002

XX/XY

English

USA

Rating:6.0
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Profile of XX/XY

XX/XY can be described as clever, contemplative, and gloomy. The plot revolves around friendship, dishonesty, and couples. The main genres are drama, independent, and romance. In terms of style, XX/XY is talky. In approach, it is realistic. It is set, at least in part, at a college. XX/XY is located in London and New York. It takes place in contemporary times. It is well suited for a date night.

Summary of XX/XY

Writer-director Austin Chick's first feature film is almost two films rolled into one. The dark, grainy first half with its choppy style introduces would-be filmmaker Coles (Mark Ruffalo), mild-mannered Samantha (Maya Stange), and self-destructive Thea (Kathleen Robertson). Coles meets the two friends at a Sarah Lawrence College in the early 1990s, and the three spend a night together that is ultimately awkward. But Coles and Samantha seem to have found true love, and the couple embarks on the kind of tempestuous relationship so common during the college years. The brighter, more conventionally shot second half of the film--which is also imbued with more comic relief--is set ten years later. Coles works in advertising and is in a stable relationship with Clare (Petra Wright), Thea is happily married and a successful restaurateur, and Sam has just returned to New York City from London having broken off her engagement. With their past love affair looming in the background, Sam and Coles are both forced to confront the past and the future, and to make some tough decisions about their lives. Chick's debut is an interesting experiment in style and structure.

Details

Language: English
Country: USA
Release date: 11 January 2002
Runtime: 91 min

Cast and Crew

Mark Ruffalo as Coles in XX/XY
Mark Ruffalo

as Coles

Kathleen Robertson as Thea in XX/XY
Kathleen Robertson

as Thea

Photos

XX/XY (2002)
XX/XY (2002)

Clips

XX/XY
XX/XY: Home Video
XX/XY
XX/XY: Official Trailer

Critics Reviews

Chicago Tribune
What makes XX/XY so engaging; it attempts to define love through broken characters who know neither themselves nor the meaning of love.
San Francisco Chronicle
The movie is really a sexy, emotionally true portrait of a handful of people wrestling with their impulses and trying to find their way to happiness.
Likely to see
Not for me

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