And So It Goes
Nobody likes self-centered realtor Oren Little, and he prefers it that way. He's deliberately mean to anyone who crosses his path and wants nothing more than to sell one final house and retire. His life turns upside-down when his estranged son drops off a granddaughter he never knew existed. Suddenly left in charge of her and with no idea how to take care of a child, he pawns the girl off on his neighbor, Leah -- but he eventually learns how to open his heart.
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- Cast:
- Michael Douglas , Diane Keaton , Sterling Jerins , Paloma Guzmán , Frances Sternhagen , Frankie Valli , Andy Karl
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Reviews
I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
That was an excellent one.
This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
Blistering performances.
Ok, so I am a sucker for dogs. He was huge and sweet, but what happened (as hill likes to say)I did not think it was offensive, just funny! Get a life people! Keaton's singing wasn't that bad but her back story was lacking! I loved when she yelled "I'm 65" looked at herself with a hilarious gesture and said yechhh! Douglas calms down grows a heart and loves his grand baby It's watchable! But the dog! Really, not even in the final scene? Picked up in the Kidd,e of nowhere! I give up
I am a sucker for a good romcom, especially when it involves two of my favorite actors. So even though IMDb reviewers gave this title a collective 5.4, I gave it a shot. I was very disappointed. The script is sappy, the action choppy and some of the scenes and scenarios highly implausible, like when Claire explains the whole story of how Luke came to be in jail, in lurid detail,in a mere 90 seconds and Oren's initial dismissiveness of the clients who finally bought his house. The relationships between the characters were not always clear, e.g.m, the realtor who was Oren's grandson should have been Luke's son or nephew but we never got that; he got Luke's story from him on Facebook. Oren's character changed too abruptly. It could have been a sweet little story but it just did not flow for me at all.
Oren Little (Michael Douglas) is a bitter selfish real estate agent after the death of his wife. He's trying to sell the family home. Leah (Diane Keaton) is his happy neighbor at Little Shangri-La. None of his neighbors like him but he owns the townhouse complex. Leah also had lost her spouse and has uncontrolled weeping. Then Oren's estranged son shows up after getting clean from drug abuse. He is forced to leave behind his daughter Sarah, who was unknown to Oren previously, after the court system screwed him over.Michael Douglas is grumpy and Diane Keaton is quirky cute. Neither is funny in here. Rob Reiner is embarrassing himself. It's his own fault since he's the director. The kid is cute but it's too obvious. She doesn't have the big personality needed to compete against these two cinematic legends. The story moves too slowly. The two stars are struggling to find the comedy.
Absolutely the most benthic waste of time a (so-called) film could be. There are NO redeeming features, the child actor should have chosen much more carefully before she jumped in. This movie is also proof an old actor like Keaton isn't as talented as we all once thought. Herein we discover can't act or sing! The oldsters acting like they're cute ought to be left taking Geritol in their temperature controlled Florida homes. Even the time taken to write this is awful, but I hope it spares anyone else from renting this POS. To Michael and Diane: if your agents talked you into this, you're both losing it. You are both senile! Find another agent. Shoot, I'll get you a better movie. Rob Reiner ought to be shot. And please leave birthing a child to your cosmetic dentist. Please, if you all decide to venture forth and stop being happy wasting geriatrics, pick a movie where you die off early in. I'd sign up to see that.