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  1. Sep 19, 2012 · Comedy. 95 minutes ‧ R ‧ 2012. Roger Ebert. September 19, 2012. 4 min read. Melanie Lynskey and Christopher Abbott in "Hello I Must Be Going." Amy is in her 30s, recently divorced, childless and has moved back home to live with her parents. Jeremy is 19, unmarried, an actor, and his mother, who is a therapist, assumes he’s gay.

  2. Jun 12, 2012 · A long way of saying I went into “Hello I Must Be Going” hoping for some knowing Marxian references beyond the title. I got a few. The film’s protagonist, Amy, (Melanie Lynskey), three-months divorced from her entertainment-attorney husband in Manhattan, and now living with her parents in Westport, Conn., used to watch the Marx Brothers with her father when she was a kid.

  3. Dec 19, 2012 · In his New York Times review, A.O. Scott points out that in similar films about men who move back home to reorient their lives, the guys are usually given the benefit of the doubt (see, for instance, Jeff, Who Lives at Home). Women, no such luck. In Hello I Must be Going, Amy’s parents and her brother are downright cruel. They’re derisive ...

  4. Parents need to know that Hello I Must Be Going is a mature dramedy with several weighty themes: post-divorce angst, a May-December (or, rather, May September) romance, and depression. There are plenty of sexually charged scenes of a couple making out and more (complete with requisite heavy breathing), though….

    • Oscilloscope Pictures
    • Todd Louisa
  5. Sep 4, 2012 · Fear, anxiety and depression: Amy Minsky (Lynskey) is feeling all of those things at the start of Todd Louiso’s Sundance-pandering dramedy, and who can blame he

  6. Call it passing the time with a 19-year-old. It is on the QT. When her mom calls the kid gay, she almost chokes on the corn on the cob, and Dad has to Heimlich her after which she laughs lustily ...

    • (51)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • R
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  8. Box office. $354,939 [1] Hello I Must Be Going is a 2012 American independent romantic dramedy film. Directed by Todd Louiso, it stars Melanie Lynskey, Christopher Abbott, Blythe Danner, and John Rubinstein. The film had its world premiere at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, [2] and was released theatrically in the United States on September 7 ...

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