Screened as part of NZIFF 2015

Grandma 2015

Directed by Paul Weitz World

Lily Tomlin is perfectly cast as a sharp-tongued, taboo-breaking granny who comes out fighting for her pregnant teenage granddaughter in this constantly surprising comedy-drama from About a Boy director Paul Weitz.

Sep 10

Lido Hamilton

Sep 11

Lido Hamilton

USA In English
80 minutes DCP

Director, Screenplay

Producers

Paul Weitz
,
Andrew Miano
,
Terry Dougas
,
Paris Latsis

Photography

Tobias Datum

Editor

Jonathan Corn

Production designers

Cindy Chao
,
Michele Yu

Music

Joel P. West

With

Lily Tomlin (Elle)
,
Julia Garner (Sage)
,
Marcia Gay Harden (Judy)
,
Judy Greer (Olivia)
,
Laverne Cox (Deathy)
,
Sam Elliott (Karl)
,
Nat Wolff (Cam)
,
John Cho (Chau)

Festivals

Sundance
,
Tribeca 2015

Elsewhere

Lily Tomlin’s no cuddly movie granny in this richly loaded comedy of intergenerational female camaraderie – and exasperation. She’s just sent her young girlfriend (Judy Greer) packing and she is super cranky. When her teenage granddaughter Sage (Julia Garner) turns up out of nowhere, Elle (Tomlin) gets the picture in no time: Sage is pregnant and whatever she decides to do, she’s counting on grandma to come out fighting for her. In the course of a day, Elle fronts up to anyone who could or should, in her opinion, help Sage out: the hapless impregnator, her own friends and ex-lovers, and, most unlikely of all, Elle’s daughter, Sage’s uptight lawyer mother (a hilarious Marcia Gay Harden). Writer/director Paul Weitz (About a Boy, American Pie) knows just how to pace his stellar cast and lightly convey the poignancy of imperfect life choices that make laughing out loud so essential.

“This is a refreshingly modest, no-frills movie that is character-driven in the most rewarding possible sense, with an ample share of priceless dialogue played for truth, not for jokes. The performances are lovely, including that of up-and-comer Garner, who has many touching moments as Sage… However, everything in the movie revolves around the irreplaceable Tomlin, and rightly so. Her entire history as an actor, a comedian, a feminist and a pioneering voice for LGBT rights comes into play in this formfitting role. Anybody who loves her – and if you don’t, why are you even reading? – won’t want to miss this.” — David Rooney, Hollywood Reporter