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Sorry, Baby
Sorry, Baby

Sorry, Baby

20251h 44m★ 6.9ドラマコメディ

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

作品考察・見どころ

この作品の真髄は、言葉の裏に隠された滑稽さと切実な孤独を、鋭い観察眼で切り取った演出にあります。豪華なキャスト陣が織りなすアンサンブルは圧巻で、特にエヴァ・ヴィクターやルーカス・ヘッジズらが見せる、微妙な表情の揺らぎや「間」の演技が、観客の心にザラリとした余韻を残します。現代社会における自己弁護と誠実さの狭間で揺れ動く人間模様が、洗練された映像美と共に鮮やかに描き出されています。 単なるコメディの枠を超え、本作は「謝罪」という行為が持つ欺瞞と救済の本質を深く問いかけます。登場人物たちの痛々しくも愛おしい空回りを通じて、私たちは自分自身の不完全さを突きつけられるはずです。映像表現ならではの静寂と喧騒の対比が、言葉にできない感情を雄弁に物語っており、鑑賞後には世界の見え方が少しだけ変わるような、強烈な磁力を持った傑作といえるでしょう。

興行成績

製作費: $1,500,000 (2億円)

興行収入: $2,279,895 (3億円)

推定収支: $779,895 (1億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

予告・トレイラー

キャスト

Eva Victor
Eva Victor
Agnes
ナオミ・アッキー
ナオミ・アッキー
Lydie
ルイス・キャンセルミ
ルイス・キャンセルミ
Preston Decker
Kelly McCormack
Kelly McCormack
Natasha
ルーカス・ヘッジズ
ルーカス・ヘッジズ
Gavin
ジョン・キャロル・リンチ
ジョン・キャロル・リンチ
Pete
Hettienne Park
Hettienne Park
Eleanor Winston
E.R. Fightmaster
E.R. Fightmaster
Fran
Cody Reiss
Cody Reiss
Devin
Jordan Mendoza
Jordan Mendoza
Logan

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Eva Victor

脚本: Eva Victor

音楽: Lia Ouyang Rusli

制作: Adele Romanski / Barry Jenkins / Mark Ceryak

撮影監督: Mia Cioffi Henry

制作会社: PASTEL / Big Beach / Tango Entertainment / High Frequency Entertainment / Case Study Films / Charades / AF Films

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 6

When we experience a traumatic tragedy, we often can’t fathom how we’re going to respond to it. Some reactions may follow expected patterns. But others may come across as wholly unpredictable, in large part because we don’t quite know what to make of them ourselves. That can become considerably more complicated when we don’t even know how to speak about them, to find the words to sufficiently express our feelings. And, when you combine all of these elements, you have the basis for the quandary faced by unnerved protagonist Agnes Ward (actor-writer-director Eva Victor in her debut feature). The film, told in a series of time-shuffled chapters over the course of several years, follows the troubling experience of a graduate student/professor (Victor) enrolled in the English lit program at a small liberal arts college in rural New England, along with her patchwork attempts at reconciling her feelings about it. In the course of sorting out her emotions, her plans for dealing with her circumstances and the potential fallout involved, and the impact of the event on her life and prevailing outlook, she examines her options and feelings from a variety of angles. And, in the course of doing so, she engages in a series of introspective but often-vague conversations with her best friend (Naomi Ackie), her kindly but somewhat bumbling neighbor (Lucas Hedges), an embittered rival from the university (Kelly McCormack) and a Samaritan sandwich shop owner (John Carroll Lynch) who helps her overcome a serious panic attack while driving, among others. These dialogues often mix a curious combination of poignant observations, dark humor and blunt revelations. But therein lies the picture’s fatal flaw – this odd concoction of story elements doesn’t mesh well, leaving viewers wondering where the narrative is ultimately headed (the overriding uncertainty of the lead’s reaction to her circumstances notwithstanding). It’s as if this offering is constantly reaching for a profound insight that it’s fundamentally unable to adequately express, an experience that becomes ever more exasperating as the picture unfolds. That’s unfortunate given the subject matter involved here, but the goal is never sufficiently attained, presenting the audience with an array of random situations and a collection of unrelated characters that seem to provide the basis of something meaningful that never emerges. To its credit, there are some truly engaging moments (though not enough of them), backed by fine performances and some gorgeous cinematography. But those qualities aren’t nearly enough to save this lost and meandering exercise that seems innately incapable of answering its own questions, making for what essentially amounts to an ambitious but innately unsatisfying watch.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

There is something especially individual about the lead characterisation here, and even though Eve Victor delivers strongly, I just didn’t really engage with it. We conclude fairly swiftly that her “Agnes” has suffered some trauma in her life and that now, in her late twenties, she has taken up a professorial job in a small rural community where she seems content to live en seul. Except, that is, until her friend “Lydia” (Naomie Ackie) comes to visit. She and her new girlfriend are expecting a baby and though joyous of the news, it seems to awaken in “Agnes” an appreciation of a hitherto subdued sense of loneliness. During this visit, and thereafter, the plot dances between timelines as we learn more about both women, particularly “Agnes” and along the way are put through quite an emotional wringer. There is a degree of humour here, but it’s not the giggle sort - more along the observational, story of life, line that is often quite relatable but frequently swamped in a surfeit of dialogue. It also strays into the melodramatic one too often, too - not least as it descends a little into a well of self-pity that isn’t really supported by any depth of likeable characterisation. Ultimately, I think that was probably my issue with “Agnes” here. I just couldn’t really empathise with her, despite the heinous nature of the incident, and though entirely justifiable, I found her just a little too self-centred. Sorry, baby, but I just felt fairly underwhelmed and uncomfortably disconnected all the way through.

badelf
badelf
★ 7

For a first feature film, Sorry, Baby is truly impressive. Eva Victor takes on the triple threat of writing, directing, and starring, and she pulls it off with a creative approach that actually works. This is a story about recovery from trauma, but Victor resists the conventional playbook. Instead of solemnity or melodrama, she gives us something lighter, wry, even funny, without ever minimizing what her character Agnes has endured. The film follows Agnes, a reclusive college literature professor, as she navigates life after something terrible has happened. Victor doesn't make trauma the spectacle; she makes the aftermath the subject, the slow, awkward process of trying to keep going when everyone around you has already moved on. There's a timeless quality to this film: you can't quite place when it's set, no cell phones, muted tones—that keeps it from feeling like a topical issue film and more like a study in human resilience. Eva Victor and Naomi Ackie both did a great job. Victor brings a specificity to Agnes that avoids cliché, while Ackie, as her friend Lydie who's moved on to New York, grounds the film in the reality that life doesn't pause for your pain. Their dynamic feels real, complicated, and honest. Victor announces herself here as a formidable talent, someone who understands that you can take difficult material seriously without being heavy-handed, that recovery isn't a straight line, and that sometimes a light touch is exactly what trauma requires. This is a strong, assured debut.

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