Shailene Woodley stars in 'Like Crazy' director Drake Doremus' latest exploration of unconventional modern This movie — whose title, "Endings, Beginnings," is cutesily withheld until just before the credits roll — is like the mumblecore version of "The Philadelphia. Revisit these iconic summer movies, from coming-of-age favorites, to whirlwind romances, to camp slashers. Emotional and familial blanks are vaguely filled in (the script — by Jardine Libaire and the director, Drake Doremus — is partly improvised by the actors), but the movie delivers mood more successfully than information.
Endings, Beginnings movie reviews & Metacritic score: In present day Los Angeles, Daphne (Shailene Woodley), a thirty something woman, navigates love and hea. Shailene Woodley proves to be the perfect partner for Drake Doremus in trying to trace one woman's journey to self-realization. Endings, Beginnings Review: Shailene Woodley Dazzles In Lackluster Love Story.
Endings, Beginnings favors style over substance, rarely igniting the spark its meant to and anchored only by a compelling Shailene Woodley. We review Drake Doremus' Endings, Beginnings. Fittingly, Drake Doremus's Endings, Beginnings begins with an ending. Daphne (Shailene Woodley) is reeling from a breakup. Her four-year-long relationship has come to a close and she isn't quite sure how to navigate the new normal of. 'Endings, Beginnings': Film Review That applies to just about everyone in Drake Doremus' wilted kale salad of a movie, Endings, Beginnings.
Trailer Endings, Beginnings
Halfway through the movie, she wonders aloud if life might be better if things worked the way they did in Father of the Bride. Then she gets out of bed. Movie Review. [Editor's Note: Endings, Beginnings was not rated, a trend we're seeing more and more of with streaming, on-demand films.
Daphne can see doors closing all around her, but for the first time in her life, she's slowly beginning to realize that some things have to end in order to make. "Endings, Beginnings" is a vapid, endless bore. When I reviewed Endings, Beginnings last fall, I didn't watch it just once. I watched it the first time to take it all in, a second to pinpoint what I wanted to Put your phone away, let yourself fall into this movie, and get ready to hit play again as soon as it's over. It's the kind of movie you don't even want.