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Brigsby Bear

Brigsby Bear (2017)

July. 28,2017
|
7.3
|
PG-13
| Drama Comedy

Brigsby Bear Adventures is a children's TV show produced for an audience of one: James. When the show abruptly ends, James's life changes forever, and he sets out to finish the story himself.

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Actuakers
2017/07/28

One of my all time favorites.

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GazerRise
2017/07/29

Fantastic!

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Bereamic
2017/07/30

Awesome Movie

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SpunkySelfTwitter
2017/07/31

It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.

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michaelmouse1
2017/08/01

Special films like this one come along not often enough. It's emotionally engaging and that's all you need to know. With touches of Donnie Darko, Mysterious Skin and similar works of art that don't fit any set genre, if you are in any way empathetic, it will take you gently by the hand to a place you probably won't expect. The time you spend with this little gem will be well worth every moment. Enjoy the trip!

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evanston_dad
2017/08/02

I soooo wanted to like "Brigsby Bear." I saw it after coming off a string of depressing, bleak movies about people being nasty and mean to one another, and a film with a big heart full of decent characters all wanting to just do the right thing was appealing. But the screenplay for this movie is just lousy, and the film overall simply does not work because of it.I think the film is meant to strike a satirical tone, kind of a "Napoleon Dynamite" vibe, but it's not confident enough in itself to do it well. It makes a joke out of a dark premise (a child is abducted as a baby and raised by his kidnappers until he's reunited with his birth parents a good 25 years later), which could work under the right circumstances. But it so doggedly avoids dealing with any of the emotional or even just procedural collateral that would come with such a story in its interest to make everything happen easily and neatly. It's like a college student wrote a term paper about a subject he knows nothing about and didn't feel like researching.Greg Kinnear and Mark Hammill are the most recognizable faces that show up in this one. I would add Jane Adams to the list, but she's in a teensy-tiny part of the movie at the very beginning and is never seen again. I know she's not necessarily a major star, but she's a recognizable enough actress that one wonders if there are additional scenes of her that were left on the cutting room floor.Grade: C+

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Red_Identity
2017/08/03

I wouldn't say this is a great film. But it's definitely a good one. I think a darker version of this film could have been told (not unlike the version told by the film Room from 2015), but for what it is, it gets the job done. I think the reason it does work so well is because of the lead performance. It's a believable role played by a believable actor. The supporting actors are also quite good. Not a must-see or anything but definitely recommended.

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Sam Panico
2017/08/04

James Pope never left home, content to live with his parents. His only concern in the world is his obsession with a children's television program titled Brigsby Bear Adventures, writing detailed recaps of the show and debating each episode online with other fans. But what if the world he lives in isn't reality?James (Kyle Mooney, SNL) has spent his life underground with his parents, Ted and April Mitchum (Mark Hamill and Jane Adams). Forced to stay underground because the rest of the world has been contaminated by radiation, James fills his days with Brigsby Bear, always wearing a shirt from the show, collecting merchandise and watching every episode, which he has on VHS tape. This may hit a little close to home.As he dons a gas mask and sneaks out to the roof to watch the desert, James sees police cars approaching his home. He, Ted and April are taken away. He meets Detective Vogel (Greg Kinnear, Little Miss Sunshine), who tells him that what he has come to accept as reality is untrue. He has a real set of parents and a sister. And even more shocking, Brigsby Bear wasn't a real show, but was created by Ted just for him. No one else knows anything about his greatest obsession - even the people he talked to on the internet were his abductors.James needs to learn how to relate to his real parents, Greg and Louise Pope (Matt Walsh, a founding member of the Upright Citizens Brigade and Michaela Watkins, an SNL cast member from 2008-2009 and The House) and their daughter Aubrey (Ryan Simpkins, Revolutionary Road and The House).You instantly realize that everyone has been living in a different version of reality. For James' real parents, they had spent 25 years looking for him and can't break the behavior patterns that allowed them to mentally survive. And his sister has grown to resent the brother she has never met. But this isn't a cookie cutter movie - she has the capacity to love James and even takes him to a party.You might expect the drinking and drugs in this scene to lead to tragedy, but instead they allow James to open up and discuss Brigsby with a large crowd, including Spencer, who is an aspiring filmmaker. They agree to finish the story of Brisgby Bear.Detective Vogel gives James the show's props and show of his videotapes, which he uploads to YouTube, creating a new audience for the show that only he has seen and building anticipation for his movie. However, James' parents and therapist (Claire Danes) don't approve, thinking that this is holding him back from accepting reality.While filming in the woods, James creates a giant explosion, shocking everyone and drawing the police. He loses all of the costumes and props as the result.One night, determined to tell his story, he leaves in his parent's car and goes to his old home, which now seems just as alien as the world he has re-entered. This reminded me of Room, but not in a bad way. On his way back to his new home, James decides to find Whitney (Kate Lyn Sheil, You're Next), a waitress who played the Smiles sisters on Brigsby. She's the only woman that he's ever loved - sure, it's been through a fake TV show created by his abductive father - but it's love nonetheless. She tells him how badly she felt once she learned what the truth was, as she had been led to believe that the show was created for Canadian public access. As the police arrive to arrest him, he confesses his love for her and asks her to be in his movie.James is institutionalized, where he meets Eric (Andy Samberg), who keeps his spirits up. One night, he decides to run away, but once he gets home to grab clothes, he learns that his family, Spencer and Detective Vogel have been working on finishing his movie. The scene where Aubrey stands up for her brother and shows them how the power of creating a movie has helped him be normal and make friends felt powerful and honest.There's only one thing missing, but only James would know: Brigsby's voice just isn't right. He goes to jail to visit Ted, who offers to explain why he abducted him. But James has already made peace with his "old dad" and just wants his help to finish the film.The film is completed, with Detective Vogel getting to live his dream of being an actor and Whitney getting to escape the diner to act again.On the night of the movie's premiere, James is nervous to the point of nausea, worried that people won't enjoy the culture that had once belonged only to him. Yet when he walks into the theater, he only sees pure joy. His mother and father are crying in happiness, his sister welcomes him with an embrace and when he looks to the stage, he sees Brigsby, who waves goodbye and disappears.The end of this film reduced me to tears. Seriously, I found this whole movie to be near perfect.Brigsby Bear was co-written by Mooney and Kevin Costello, and directed by Dave McCary - three friends who went to high school together and later formed the sketch group Good Neighbor with Beck Bennett and Nick Rutherford (who also appear in the film). So much of the film was based on their years of making videos together, Mooney being a nostalgic introvert and the worries that no one will love what you spent so long creating.They based the videos within the film on the aesthetic of 80's kid's shows, like Prayer Bear. Mooney is a big collector of strange videos, like the stuff that shows up at the amazing Found Footage Festival.This was one of my favorite films this year and would be a perfect way to close out your 2017!

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