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(Untitled)
Directed by
Jonathan Parker
R
2009
1h 36m
Drama
,
Comedy
,
and more
6.2
64%
57%
6.4
Add to Watchlist
A Chelsea art gallerist falls for a brooding new music composer in this comic tale about the state of contemporary art.
More
Where to Watch (Untitled)
The Roku Channel
Free
Tubi TV
Free
Fandango At Home
Free
Cast of (Untitled)
Adam Goldberg
Adrian Jacobs
Marley Shelton
Madeleine Gray
Eion Bailey
Josh Jacobs
Lucy Punch
The Clarinet
Vinnie Jones
Ray Barko
Zak Orth
Porter Canby
Jonathan Parker
Director / Writer
Catherine DiNapoli
Writer
(Untitled) Ratings & Reviews
NPR
Ian Buckwalter
Writer-director Jonathan Parker sets us up for a 90-minute debate on aesthetics and artistic integrity, and that's a tedious exercise in any medium.
Film.com
Eric D. Snider
Skewers the world of contemporary art in a way that's insightful and funny without becoming a broad parody.
Filmcritic.com
Chris Barsanti
...spry and spiky satire...
Reeling Reviews
Robin Clifford
The characters...are wrapped up in their own perceptions of their greatness and are an odious lot. This is fitting for the film but leaves the viewer without a character to like.
Seattle Times
John Hartl
The impenetrable gallery jargon is quite funny at first, and the brothers' twisted relationship is set up nicely, but the movie errs when it takes itself seriously.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
(Untitled) asks a lot of intriguing questions -- more intriguing than the film itself.
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
A serious comedy in which the assorted players - a couple of artists, some gallerists, and the people who attend (or don't attend) their shows - discuss what art is, what it should aspire to be, and what kind of people collect, exhibit, and consider it.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
The performances here are all stellar, and narrative movies that take the making of art seriously are a rare breed indeed.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
Has the punctuation and the thinness of a gallery wall label.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
It doesn't have a hero who's right and everyone else is wrong. And though it mocks every character, it dismisses nobody. It makes a case for every point of view, including those the filmmakers don't share.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
(Untitled) is a comedy worthy of the best Woody Allen, and Adrian is not unlike Woody's persona: a sincere, intense, insecure nebbish, hopeless with women, aiming for greatness.
New York Daily News
Elizabeth Weitzman
Because Parker is so determined to expose the art scene's pretensions, he neglects other areas, like dialogue, plot and character. And what's the point in making a shallow satire about shallow subjects?
Los Angeles Times
Gary Goldstein
There's plenty to recommend.
New York Times
Stephen Holden
Shrewdly hedges its bets about the value of it all, it is ultimately on the side of experimental music and art and their champions, no matter how eccentric. For that alone this brave little movie deserves an audience.
New York Post
Kyle Smith
(Untitled) is a tinny satire destined to go (Unwatched) because it is (Uninteresting).
AV Club
Scott Tobias
Shelton's radiant performance as the brothers' elusive object of desire helps rescue (Untitled) from an occasional listlessness that comes as a consequence of Parker's nuanced, gentle jabs at the art world.
The Simon
Tim Grierson
Sort of a parody of the cliquish New York art scene, but also a defense of it.
Entertainment Weekly
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Adam Goldberg glowers effectively as a serious composer of maddeningly difficult music; the wonderful Marley Shelton glows with hilariously cool composure as a gallery owner who exhibits unendurable art pieces.
Village Voice
Melissa Anderson
(Untitled) tries to reignite who-gets-to-call-it-art debates that haven't been taken seriously for at least a decade.
Slant Magazine
Simon Abrams
Parker reduces the art world to the insipid backbiting and conniving of malign thugs that enthusiastically bat around grandiose, self-serving endorsements
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