Hello I Must Be Going
Hello I Must Be Going

Watch Hello I Must Be Going Online Free

- 62/100 based on 6,412 votes

Following the break-up with and imminent divorce from her entertainment lawyer husband David, thirty-something Amy moves back in with her upper middle class parents Ruth and Stan Minsky in Westport, Connecticut. David asked for the divorce following an affair he had with who Amy considered a friend. Knowledge of the affair and David asking for the divorce came out of left field for Amy, who thought she had the perfect marriage. In her surprise and shock about David, she left ... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

Following the break-up with and imminent divorce from her entertainment lawyer husband David, thirty-something Amy moves back in with her upper middle class parents Ruth and Stan Minsky in Westport, Connecticut. David asked for the divorce following an affair he had with who Amy considered a friend. Knowledge of the affair and David asking for the divorce came out of left field for Amy, who thought she had the perfect marriage. In her surprise and shock about David, she left David basically with the clothes on her back, and has not asked for anything in the divorce settlement. Three months later, she is still in a depressed state, not leaving the house and not knowing what to do with her life. She has no real job experience, has only a liberal arts degree, and abandoned her Master's degree studies in Photography to marry David. She believes her parents have mixed feelings about her return. Although they have both welcomed her back, she believes Ruth is critical not so much about what she does but more about what she doesn't do. Focused Ruth has a perfectly laid out plan for the twilight of her and Stan's lives, which largely is to complete the renovations on the house and travel the world, and didn't include Amy moving back in with them. Conversely, Amy believes Stan is the only person who loves her unconditionally, despite he admitting he never knowing the right thing to say to her. To her surprise and reluctance, Amy enters into a clandestine relationship with nineteen year old Jeremy, an actor with a modicum of success and fame. The reason for not telling anyone of the relationship is due to a combination of the differences in their ages, and the fact that Jeremy's stepfather Larry is a potential client of Stan's, Stan who feels that he needs Larry as a client to be able to retire, something he has already postponed due to market forces working against him. As much as both Amy and Jeremy become emotionally invested in the other's life - Jeremy who is facing his own issues, despite the overwhelming support from his therapist mother, Gwen, who is his biggest champion in whatever he does - Amy is still reluctant to classify what they have as a relationship. As certain realities come to light within this collective of people, Amy may come to some conclusions about the post-David phase of her life.

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Movie Reviews

MSN Movies - 9/10 by Glenn Kenny... not just one of the finest indie releases of the year, but one of the sharpest and most moving and engaging movies of the year, period.
ColeSmithey.com - 9/10 by Cole Smithey[VIDEO ESSAY] Hello I Must Be Going" is a delightful slow boil adult romantic comedy that taps increasingly harder on your funny bone before really letting you have it with a brilliantly conceived scene of exponentially embarrassing implications.
amNewYork - 9/10 by Robert LevinBolstered by a terrific performance from Melanie Lynskey, who brings dignity and humor to what could have been a downbeat part.
Combustible Celluloid - 9/10 by Jeffrey M. AndersonIt has plenty of little moments for a great actress to shine. It's just not very deep, or particularly fresh.
New York Post - 9/10 by Farran Smith NehmeThere are some catches, including a breathy-voiced indie-rock soundtrack so bad you wonder if it's contributing to Amy's malaise. But overall, the comedy is a lovely showcase for Lynskey and the rest of the cast.
Slate - 8/10 by Dana StevensI hope Hello, I Must Be Going will introduce many new viewers to Lynskey's charms, and that at least of a few of them will be casting directors.
Common Sense Media - 8/10 by S. Jhoanna RobledoUnlikely post-divorce romance anchors mature dramedy.
TheFilmFile.com - 8/10 by Dustin PutmanCarries with it a low-key transcendence, flourishing first and foremost through its lost and aching protagonist.
Film School Rejects - 8/10 by Landon Palmer...a sincerely personal take on its subject matter, opting for three-dimensional leads and earned pathos over quirky character traits, cynical humor, or an invasively stylized visual approach.
USA Today - 8/10 by Claudia PuigWhile it's too hastily and neatly resolved, Hello I Must Be Going is a funny, well-written, involving and emotionally honest tale.

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Hello I Must Be Going