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  1. SnoopyStyle 27 October 2013. Amy (Melanie Lynskey) has left her husband and moved back with her parents (Blythe Danner, John Rubinstein). She is depressed and unmotivated. She can barely get up the will to dress nicely for a dinner party. At the party, she begins an affair with 19 year old Jeremy (Christopher Abbott).

  2. Hello I Must Be Going offers an offbeat twist to the romance genre, a solid character study for fans of grown-up drama, and a career-making breakout vehicle for Melanie Lynskey. "Hello I Must Be ...

    • (51)
    • Todd Louiso
    • R
    • Melanie Lynskey
  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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
  6. A fine and funny film balanced perfectly between heartbreak and uplift, anchored by a rich, superlative turn from Melanie Lynskey. Full Review | Original Score: B+ | Nov 1, 2012. Calvin Wilson St ...

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  8. 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

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