All the Light in the Sky (2012) Poster

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7/10
A nice little gem
alexqueens30 October 2019
Had I known that Jane Adams had done a film with the guy who wrote and directed Drinking Buddies and Win it All, I would've been on this way sooner. Jane Adams as like a little hidden gem of an actress for me. Even though I'd love for her to break out with bigger and better roles. She just seems to exude a certain realness that's often hard to transfer onto the screen. Even seeing her nude in this was the cutest non-sexual scene I've come across in a while. It's like watching real life.

But the end scene where her character Marie is cozying up with her neighbor Rusty on the couch was so damn sweet and authentic that it kinda blew me away. Their expressions, their gestures and how they talked to each other was as real as it gets. I felt like a voyeur watching these people and the intimacy they enjoyed in each other as friends.

Unfortunately, none of the other actors appealed to me in any way, but I could easily watch more of Marie and Rusty.
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6/10
Quiet film, well-acted
suitesuzanne13 December 2018
You can also see this on Kanopy if you have access to this streaming service. It's where I found it.
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8/10
Swanberg's key stylistic attributes blended with a refreshing new set of themes
StevePulaski5 January 2014
With Joe Swanberg's latest picture, All the Light in the Sky, he has turned over a new leaf, redirecting his attention from post-college listlessness to what seems to be post-peak listlessness, in the regard that the lead character hasn't been the center of attention for quite sometime now. She is far past her peak, living day-by-day in a redundant funk that has consumed her for many years now. It's a depressing reality, but Swanberg provides the subject matter with simple direction and an unusual warmness, making for a favorable seventy-nine minutes.

Jane Adams, in a terrific performance, plays Marie, a struggling, middle-aged actress residing in a home perched over a lovely beach in Malibu. Marie is an insomniac, usually getting minimal sleep while she listens to her audiobook, rising in the morning to put on a wetsuit in order to go surfing, and hearing from her publicist about ambitious roles she didn't get due to her age. In walks her young, perky niece Faye of about twenty-five years old, an ambitious actress who appears to be everything Marie was at one point. When Marie's with Faye, she feels younger and clearly sees herself in the young, kindred spirit.

Consider a scene when Marie and Faye go surfing and are putting on their wetsuits. "I wish I always had this extra layer of protection," says Marie, clearly alluding to the need for an extra layer to fend off criticism and life's negative instances. Marie explains how her level of fragility has been increased since getting older in a way that Faye seems to understand but reject, understandably so. Faye is young and really shouldn't be too concerned with what will come later in life. Right now, she has a boyfriend she's sure will be her fiancée, high hopes with acting, and a supportive aunt as a role model - why worry? Another great scene is when the girls are on Marie's balcony, taking off their wetsuits after surfing. They both stand completely naked, in true Swanberg fashion of nonchalantly and maturely dismissing the nudity on screen. The nudity is special because it is so trivial, banal, and unnecessary. Marie tells Faye what great breasts she has been blessed with, perky and alive, and mentions she once had great breasts but they slumped into nothing but unremarkable flatness in recent years. This scene, in short, may pose commentary on Hollywood's treatment of female nudity. If your breasts aren't perky and alive, what value do you have in a sex scene? All the Light in the Sky is littered with little scenes like these, and is made all the more special because of, what film critic Ignatiy Vishnevetsky calls, Swanberg's "potluck" style of filmmaking. The inclusion of filmmakers such as Ti West and familiar faces such as Adams and indie actor Kent Osborne (who also appeared in Swanberg's Uncle Kent) in a documentary-style light, combined with Swanberg's frequent use of improvised dialog, each person is bringing their own particular taste in style to the table and could be potentially voicing their own opinions in their discussions.

All the Light in the Sky's biggest issue is trying to make a clear statement, however. Some scenes feel out of place and leave the film a bit messy and skewed in its theme, as if the film is going for more of a metaphorical statement (the frequent use of Marie's audiobook, long shots of silence, etc) and not the one I feel it is trying to emphasize on (the effects of age and the fall from ones peak). Moreover, this is one of Swanberg's finest pictures, showing him tackling a new subject matter with the same old, delightful mumblecore style. Thankfully this film of Swanberg's is one that is accessible and not burdened by seldom distribution.

NOTE: All the Light in the Sky is available to rent for a low price on Amazon Instant Video after a very limited theatrical run at the tailend of 2013.

Starring: Jane Adams, Sophia Takal, Kent Osborne, Larry Fessenden, and Ti West. Directed by: Joe Swanberg.
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Talk About Boring
drednm1 May 2020
Jane Adams stars in this boring look at an actress who lives in a dumpy condo with a great ocean view. That's about it. She has a niece come to visit and she talks to a couple guys.

She sits around the condo, goes out on a paddle board, drives around, and she talks and talks and talks, mostly about herself. There's also a truly boring guy who lectures on the pieces and parts of solar collectors and atmospheric testing equipment.

She and her group always seem to be drunk or high. Incredibly boring film with nice shots of the ocean.
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3/10
Yawn enducing and awkward
watchesandwhisky24 November 2022
Pretty boring. An actress not getting the roles any more due to getting older now has her niece come and stay who is an aspiring actress. There is a couple of rather odd, unnecessary and awkward nude scenes between the aunt and niece where they playfully interact while nude and laugh like its normal. It seemed a little gratuitous and felt quite obviously forced, especially the scene with the hose and taking the pictures. Like, is this common?

The key characters have the expected emotional journey, but its hard to say that journey takes the movie anywhere interesting. You get the feeling of where they hope it will go, but it just doesn't get there, or even close.

Also some bonus global warming/climate issues rolled in there for effect.

It's all pretty mid tbh.
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8/10
A slice-of-life seemingly unscripted view of the acting life
leighant3 December 2012
Jane Adams, who has been in some two dozen movies and TV series over 20 years, plays an actress much like herself who is about 40 years old. She lives in a row house on the beach in Malibu and goes board-riding every day she is not working. She is not portrayed as a star and is no longer in demand for the juicier parts as much as when she was younger. She has a young friend, a woman barely in her 20s, coming out to California to be in movies- the new sweet young thing about to be exploited. They compare their figures, their roles, their experiences, their men, and how time treats them. Meanwhile, the people who hang around them who talk about global warming and how the places built along the beach are going to be gone in ten years, washed away by rising sea levels. One guy who has bought a row house says he knows it will be gone but he might as well enjoy it now. The film suggests a parallel between the earth and nature wearing down, and individual lives wearing down. Beautiful women, beautiful place, beautiful photography.
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8/10
Natural and Quietly Profound
possiblyatrout30 April 2019
I always found acting performances about normal people far more impressive than ones about someone insane. Normal people have worries, memories, and flaws. Those are infinitely harder to embody than craziness, which so often acts as a substitute for actual personality. Marie (Jane Adams), the aging actress living on the shores of Malibu, feels natural, feels real. The people feel so organic that when two characters kiss, it's uncomfortable, like I was invading their privacy or something. What might turn some people off is the fact that nothing concrete actually happens. At first glance it just seems like an actress and her niece doing things around their house. But under the surface it's quite a thoughtful story about the prospect of aging, loneliness, and love, about how most doors close in life -- quietly and unknown to us.
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A beautiful set of stories in need of more love
ersbel19 May 2019
NetFlix has decided well to give Swanberg a series of short stories. Although much better done, this movie reminds me of the usual European Art movie.

There is the story of the main character. Which goes nowhere. It's a sketch. 30 minutes would have been way too much for it. Yet it is blown to some 45 minutes.

Than there is the story of the younger character. Which is not a younger main character. It is a different story entirely with different issues.

Than there is some mandatory preaching about ecology. Or high tech as perceived by someone with an education in Humanities. And those are from another movie altogether.

And if the larger story goes nowhere, it would have been unfair to have any of the shorter stories go anywhere either, somehow like the second daughter can't get married till the first born daughter is given to some male.

The acting is good. The scenes are so natural and well felt. The light is not unpleasant like in most Mumblecore movies.

And why the often change in backdrop? Yes, it can be there to show how a woman goes out of her zone of comfort to have sex at the partner's home. But all these stories could have happened in the same place: the upstairs home and the downstairs beach linked not by a staircase, but by sand.
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