Atom User Reviews for We Live In Time
This was a phenomenal and emotional movie. The cast is amazing, making every scene feel heartfelt and realistic. The pacing of showing the different scenes was all done very well, each scene cut playing off the sort of element of the other. Great, grounded cinematography. The only reason I give a 4 star instead of a 5 is that I wish there were one or two more scenes that showed more just them being in casual, common conversation, with dialogue. If I recall correctly, many of the scenes between just them tended to have something of heavier substance.
Bring your tissues! It was such a great movie and I loved the casting! My mother fought cancer and this movie depicted this woman’s decision to not allow it to define her which I thought was beautiful. My mom was the same way. She fought the entire time and had a loving family beside her.
Nice, nothing crazy
I loved being able to see Andrew and Florence in something different from what they have done. This really does create a space to be vulnerable and still create happiness in the most dark places as humans. Love!
It was a little hard for me to follow in the beginning
A very inspiring movie that people with cancer should watch. I love it because of the positive attitude the cancer patient expressed in spite of the fear and depression she faces. She was sick but she was able to reach her goal that her daughter will be proud of in spite of her condition. Any condition that we have in life does not remove our ambitions.
I waa so disappointed I even stood up and left.
It was alright pretty confusing because of the whole time jumps but good acting though
Metacritic
Such movies are manipulative by nature and we embrace them for that. Here, that’s more obvious and heavy-handed, and the manipulation tends to spare us tears — and laughs — when the tears are entirely the point.
With Pugh and Garfield delivering authentic, genuine movie-star performances, “We Live in Time” is an old-fashioned weeper, done with heart and originality. It’s a Movie We Think You’ll Like.
By crisscrossing time frames, Crowley, working from a script by playwright Nick Payne, halts his film’s momentum and lessens the overall impact of the central romance.