Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor.A suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor.A suburban dad falls hard for his charismatic new neighbor.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total
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I saw this with about 40 other people. 20 were mostly laughing, the others ( me included) sat in silence.
I cannot fault the acting. Tim Robinson was really good portraying a man never at ease with himself and in a constant state of anxiety around others. He seems very aware that he doesn't fit in. The fact that he has an actractive wife (Kate Mara), who is working her arse off on her business that he in no way helps or offers encouragement gives him any confidence.
She just goes on with her business and the job of keeping her family together.
I just did not find much humor in a film that offered one cringe worthy scene after another. Like watching a car wreck waiting for the blood.
I cannot fault the acting. Tim Robinson was really good portraying a man never at ease with himself and in a constant state of anxiety around others. He seems very aware that he doesn't fit in. The fact that he has an actractive wife (Kate Mara), who is working her arse off on her business that he in no way helps or offers encouragement gives him any confidence.
She just goes on with her business and the job of keeping her family together.
I just did not find much humor in a film that offered one cringe worthy scene after another. Like watching a car wreck waiting for the blood.
Story ~ ⭐ 5.5/10
The writer forgot to close some story lines, and when you do that, you leave the audience wanting. The movie is a negative character arc for both Robinson and Rudd, and that's depressing, especially without meaning or something else to grab onto. Yes, it was funny, at times, but it was drowned out by a sea of not enough audience payoff. Clever ending, not really.
Acting ~ ⭐ 7.0/10
Robinson is doing Robinson and Rudd is doing Rudd. Expanding on Rudd, it seems he has some acting tic he can't shake that's turned him into a cliché; it's something in his face, like an invisible string keeps him from doing something different. At times, Robinson's slapstick, especially the scene with the Vietnam hat-wearing overactor, degenerated into a yelling match that should have been left with the editor. My 7 for acting is generous, thanks to Kate Mara, who delivered the most talent and nuance by far.
Cinematography ~ ⭐ 7.5/10
Nothing special here, but not bad either. Sorry, I can't offer more.
Recommendation: This is uncomfortable, awkward humor. If you like that, rent it, but pass on the theater run.
The writer forgot to close some story lines, and when you do that, you leave the audience wanting. The movie is a negative character arc for both Robinson and Rudd, and that's depressing, especially without meaning or something else to grab onto. Yes, it was funny, at times, but it was drowned out by a sea of not enough audience payoff. Clever ending, not really.
Acting ~ ⭐ 7.0/10
Robinson is doing Robinson and Rudd is doing Rudd. Expanding on Rudd, it seems he has some acting tic he can't shake that's turned him into a cliché; it's something in his face, like an invisible string keeps him from doing something different. At times, Robinson's slapstick, especially the scene with the Vietnam hat-wearing overactor, degenerated into a yelling match that should have been left with the editor. My 7 for acting is generous, thanks to Kate Mara, who delivered the most talent and nuance by far.
Cinematography ~ ⭐ 7.5/10
Nothing special here, but not bad either. Sorry, I can't offer more.
Recommendation: This is uncomfortable, awkward humor. If you like that, rent it, but pass on the theater run.
My husband and I can't stop talking about this film and what different scenes meant. We laughed throughout it with a theater of people, but were surprised about its philosophical message and provoking themes in what it means to be an American man in 2025. I know the middle-aged men portrayed in this film, many of them used to not married to my friends, and a few still can't seem to figure out how to connect to the people in their lives. I hate how this platform forces you to use a minimum number of words, but I'm going to do it because this film is a solid 8+ and I hate that it's currently at 7.7 when it's so much better than that if you're a thinking person.
I, admittedly, cringe very easily. I can't watch reality shows because the awkward conflict makes me uncomfortable. I like Tim Robinson sometimes when his outrageousness is so over the top that it's just separate from reality. In this film, he is great, as is Paul Rudd, and frankly everyone. The cringe is low key enough in most scenes to make you truly squirm. I found myself squirming far more than laughing in this movie. It was weird, wild, and unique. I liked it and it stuck with me. I am sure that the discomfort I felt watching it was the point. If you like that cringey feeling, you will really like this movie.
We finally got around to watching Friendship, a film we had sitting in our watchlist for a while, and... wow. We went in blind, only knowing the title-and what we got was a wild mix of laugh-out-loud absurdity and deeply uncomfortable emotional breakdowns. It's not your usual buddy comedy. This one's darker, messier, and much more personal.
Winny, always the first to catch emotional undercurrents, couldn't stop talking about how painfully real the main character's unraveling felt. He saw someone falling apart under pressure, stress, and years of not being understood-someone not evil, just painfully out of step with the world. Willow leaned in with a bit more logic, pointing out how a lot of the awkward or "cringe" moments felt more like defense mechanisms than malice. According to him, the character was a man trying to hold it together while everything around him changed.
Mimikyu brought both heart and sharpness to the convo-seeing the character as someone both tragic and responsible for his mess. The film's emotional whiplash between laughter and sadness hit her hardest. Amy, true to form, didn't let anything slide. She picked up on how the main character bulldozed past boundaries and social cues, making others uncomfortable without realizing it-or maybe not caring. Tails, of course, gave us the psychological breakdown, suggesting vulnerable narcissism as the root of the meltdown, while Sweet quietly pointed out how much the partner's emotional growth left the main character completely lost, stuck in the version of himself that no longer worked.
And then there's that moment-"She's in the sewer." Hard cut to a dog being pulled up a wall. We all lost it. The absurdity, the timing, the sudden break in tone-it was pure comedy gold in a movie filled with creeping emotional dread.
In the end, Friendship had us laughing, disturbed, reflective, and more than a little heartbroken. It's not an easy film to watch, but it hits a nerve in a way few comedies dare. 8/10 from all of us.
Winny, always the first to catch emotional undercurrents, couldn't stop talking about how painfully real the main character's unraveling felt. He saw someone falling apart under pressure, stress, and years of not being understood-someone not evil, just painfully out of step with the world. Willow leaned in with a bit more logic, pointing out how a lot of the awkward or "cringe" moments felt more like defense mechanisms than malice. According to him, the character was a man trying to hold it together while everything around him changed.
Mimikyu brought both heart and sharpness to the convo-seeing the character as someone both tragic and responsible for his mess. The film's emotional whiplash between laughter and sadness hit her hardest. Amy, true to form, didn't let anything slide. She picked up on how the main character bulldozed past boundaries and social cues, making others uncomfortable without realizing it-or maybe not caring. Tails, of course, gave us the psychological breakdown, suggesting vulnerable narcissism as the root of the meltdown, while Sweet quietly pointed out how much the partner's emotional growth left the main character completely lost, stuck in the version of himself that no longer worked.
And then there's that moment-"She's in the sewer." Hard cut to a dog being pulled up a wall. We all lost it. The absurdity, the timing, the sudden break in tone-it was pure comedy gold in a movie filled with creeping emotional dread.
In the end, Friendship had us laughing, disturbed, reflective, and more than a little heartbroken. It's not an easy film to watch, but it hits a nerve in a way few comedies dare. 8/10 from all of us.
Theatrical Releases You Can Stream or Rent
Theatrical Releases You Can Stream or Rent
These big screen releases can now be watched from the comfort of your couch.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAndrew DeYoung claimed in an interview that the movie was inspired from his own experience of getting iced out of a friend group.
- GaffesTony the phone salesman refers to his Toad as the "Buffalo River Toad" but it's actually called the "Colorado River Toad.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Half in the Bag: 2025 Mid-Year Catch-up (2025)
- Bandes originalesMARIGOLDS
Written by Donny Dykowsky
Performed by MIRRORS ON THE MOON
Courtesy of THE SKI TEAM AND DONNY DYKOWSKY
By arrangement with SOSTEREO
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Friendship
- Lieux de tournage
- Yonkers, New York, États-Unis(Filming City)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 16 228 274 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 444 759 $ US
- 11 mai 2025
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 16 228 274 $ US
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1
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