Conversations with Other Women
Conversations with Other Women
R | 11 August 2006 (USA)
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Reunited at a wedding after many years, former lovers again feel the pull of a mutual attraction neither is willing to admit. Escaping the reception for the privacy of a hotel room, the unnamed pair explore the choices of the past that led them to the present.

Reviews
Hellen

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Inclubabu

Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.

WillSushyMedia

This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.

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ActuallyGlimmer

The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

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SnoopyStyle

A man (Aaron Eckhart) and a woman (Helena Bonham Carter) start flirting at a wedding. She's a last minute bridesmaid who hasn't been that close to the bride Susie (Brianna Brown) for a time. She's married to a cardiologist and he's the bride's brother. They may have a past. A mysterious girl (Nora Zehetner) has a relationship with a guy (Erik Eidem). There's an annoying videographer (Thomas Lennon) and a nosy bridesmaid (Olivia Wilde).I love the pairing of Carter and Eckhart. They are fun and touching. She is brilliant. If the movie is simply them together, I would recommend the heck out of it. Indie director Hans Canosa is using the split screen technique to add visual spice. It's mostly distracting and oddly very static. I want to stay closer to the actors but the split screen puts a certain distance from them. There is a wonderful relationship movie here if Hans forgets about the split screen.

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pufflesmoke

This split screen hard to watch. That combined with boring uninteresting dialogue that had no direction was so bland! The acting was not horrific but a drag where both actors have completed better performances in the past. Carla Brunis singing killed me in a bad way and hurt was irksome Overall my expectations were high and were let down a load and I can no believe the ratings people have delivered so far. I thought humanity had better taste yet I seem to have been let down Once again. In future I will be sure to steer clear of this director as this film Is an insult to the film industry. All in all it is an incredibly boring movie that Up me to sleep in no time. I don't even know why I bothered to write this review Considering I hated it so much! Don't watch this movie whatever you do!

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tieman64

Directed by Hans Canosa, "Conversations With Other Women" stars Aaron Eckhart and Helena Bonham Carter as a former couple who meet at a Manhattan wedding. Utilizing split-screens, the film mixes pasts, presents and subjective recollections."Time can't move in two directions," characters say. And later: "The illusion of effortlessness requires a great deal of effort." It's Canosa winking at his own filmic technique, but this aesthetic is, for the most, distracting rather than enlightening. Still, Eckhard and Carter do good work. Our duo shoot dialogue like javelins, their little speeches sketching a relationship in which perceptions, feelings and private delusions shift, reverse and dark back and forth. Man's a fickle things. Happiness too.7/10 – Worth one viewing.

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Metal Angel Ehrler

"Conversations with Other Women" is a surprisingly bold and irreverent film about the turns a relationship based on love can take. Director Hans Canosa's independent romantic comedy is quite interesting and provides us with a fresh and witty new look at the way romance may be presented in independent cinema.It's about a man (Aaron Eckhart) and a woman (Helena Bonham Carter) who meet during a wedding reception and strike an witty, interesting conversation which no doubt will lead them into scoring for the night. These seemingly strangers, we learn afterwards, actually know each other fairly well, and through various flashbacks and the ensuing conversation (which last the entire duration of the film) we learn about their relationship and what happened previously in their lives.It's a common enough story, without anything new for us to reflect or marvel upon, but the incredibly engrossing dialogue saves it from being a boring, seen-it-before romance. Also, the film is presented almost in its totality in split-screen, with the man and the woman in their respective sides of the screen or with their faces and points of view represented therein, therefore giving the viewer a dual sense of understanding that, frankly, freshens up cinematography as we've come to experience it nowadays.The film is touching and unconventionally romantic, showing us how the decisions you take and the past you've chosen either to forget or to base your future upon affects your present ones.While it isn't a film which will become an absolute independent classic, or a film which may be remembered for a long while to come, it is worthwhile if you're looking to be entertained. Also, have I mentioned the dialogue is simply amazing? Together with the unusual photography, it is enough to be worthy of its admittance fee. Watch it as soon as you can.Rating: 2 and a half stars out of 4!

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