At the beginning of Mike Mills' gorgeous new movie “C’mon C’mon” — part scripted drama, part documentary as the film’s actors interview real subjects — Johnny (Joaquin Phoenix) asks a teenage girl how ...
Mike Mill’s directorial C’mon C’mon is a black-and-white movie starring Joaquin Phoenix as the lead. The film celebrates the preciousness of life. It brings a child’s joyfulness and a man’s maturity ...
Director Mike Mills’ wonderful new movie “C’mon C’mon,” which opens Wednesday in Bay Area theaters, draws inspiration mainly from his own life, an approach he also used on his previous films, ...
C’mon C’mon couldn’t be more different than Joaquin Phoenix’s last movie, Joker. For one thing, there’s no scene where he dances to “Rock and Roll Part 2” or shoots Robert De Niro in the head… ...
Johnny (Joaquin Phoenix) is a radio journalist. He’s traveling around the country interviewing youth to understand their lives, what makes them happy, and how they perceive America’s future. Johnny’s ...
C'Mon C'Mon is one of those rare movies where kids are actually presented as complex human beings with thoughts, and the trials of parenting are approached with a stark honesty that leads to one of ...
C’mon C’mon – now on VOD – is the new drama by Mike Mills, who writes and directs a lovely, thoughtful, melancholy, insightful, hopeful film every five or six years. Joaquin Phoenix stars, his first ...
Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker performance (for portraying the deeply disturbed Arthur Fleck) won him an Oscar, but that obviously wasn’t his first tango with the Academy Awards. He scored nominations for ...
So says Johnny, a patient, constantly curious radio journalist portrayed by Joaquin Phoenix in a gratifyingly mellow, unmannered turn in “C’mon C’mon.” As the film opens, Johnny is in Detroit ...
What is ‘C’mon C’mon’ about? C’mon C’mon, according to the New York Film Festival where it is set to screen in October, is a “warm, insightful, and gratifyingly askew portrait of American family life.
Gaby Hoffmann and young newcomer Woody Norman play a frazzled mother and her preternaturally perceptive 9-year-old son, whose time in his uncle’s care proves meaningful for both of them. By David ...