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A Late Quartet

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77% Tomatometer 111 Reviews 71% Popcornmeter 5,000+ Ratings
For 25 years, the Fugue, a string quartet, has wowed music-lovers with its skilled performances. However, as the musicians prepare to celebrate a milestone season together, cellist Peter (Christopher Walken) drops a bombshell on his comrades: he has Parkinson's disease and must soon retire. In the fallout from the shocking announcement, competing egos clash, long-simmering resentments bubble to the surface, and marital infidelity rears its ugly head.
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A Late Quartet

A Late Quartet

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Critics Consensus

An outstanding ensemble cast lends weight and depth to A Late Quartet's melodramatic script, and the result is insightful and emotionally satisfying.

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Critics Reviews

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Ryan Gilbey New Statesman 10/03/2017
A Late Quartet is a terrible film-it's like an idiots' Amour. Go to Full Review
Stanley Kauffmann The New Republic 06/17/2013
We can note immediately that Zilberman has the requisite gifts. Go to Full Review
Derek Malcolm London Evening Standard 04/05/2013
4/5
It is not flawless but it makes you watch, and listen, closely throughout. Go to Full Review
Jonah Koslofsky The Spool 05/25/2021
Hoffman knew how to hold back, how to use his screen-time to imply an interiority without a script that spells everything out. Go to Full Review
Katie Smith-Wong Flick Feast 11/21/2019
3.5/5
Although the tone and pacing may not set the screen alight, A Late Quartet has sensitivity, sophistication and a strong, watchable cast ensemble. Go to Full Review
Mattie Lucas From the Front Row 08/06/2019
2.5/4
A little more of that kind of restrained elegance and musical beauty may have freed the film from its somewhat stifling atmosphere. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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James B. @JamesBass Dec 23 Every so often you come across a film with modest expectations and end up completely absorbed, surprised by how quickly it reaches its conclusion. A Late Quartet is that kind of film. The story resonates on more than just a musical level. Anyone who has spent years working closely with the same group of people will recognize how personal histories, unspoken tensions, and shifting loyalties naturally surface—particularly when questions of artistic integrity come into play. The film explores these dynamics with sensitivity and restraint. Philip Seymour Hoffman, Christopher Walken, Catherine Keener, and Mark Ivanir (as the lead violinist, Daniel) deliver performances that feel natural and authentic, grounding the drama in genuine human emotion rather than melodrama. A thoughtful and engaging film that unfolds with quiet confidence. See more Matheus F @matheusf_neto Aug 26 I simply love the chemistry between Philip Seymour Hoffman and Catherine Keener in this movie and all the movies they worked together like Capote [2005] and Synecdoche [2008]. Walken is perfect as always. See more Alain E @AlainE May 21 Beautifully photographed and with superb music, if you enjoy Beethoven’s late string quartets. There is interplay of four adult main characters in situations that don’t appear hyperbolic. If the great Seymour Hoffman exercised like in this movie instead of shooting heroin, he would still be among us. The story examines friendship, loss, infidelity and facing the consequences of old age. See more Madam D @Madam1948 Apr 6 A moving drama with great acting, well-written script and beautiful music. See more Ethan T 04/09/2021 A mediocre, at times good film that could have been great. I felt that the script was formulated with great care for the music. The musical sequences are wonderful (contrasting to the usual horrific ones we see all too often where the actors clearly haven't been given any instruction), and the film felt as if it were written by and for musicians... for the most part. I do wish that the film had remained about the music, as the original storyline concerning an aging cellist struggling with Parkinson's was by far the strongest. As the film progresses, though, it becomes a melodrama built upon the backdrop of these professional classical musicians, rather than a preferred inversion that would have improved the experience for me. Let's keep with the positives. Christopher Walken was excellent, playing a sane man and a voice of reason to the growing drama around him. Hoffman performs with a reliable commitment. I thought that his desire for love, affection, and acceptance manifested into his dealings with other characters in an intelligent form. Keener and Ivanir do alright for themselves, but the story falls apart when the focus falls from Walken. The infidelity plotline involving Keener and Hoffman's marriage seemed serviceable as long as it didn't take center stage, but the romance between Ivanir and Poots was nonsensical and deserves a more full dissection. I could not stand Poots's character. At first I thought it might be her accent feeling unnatural, as a Brit playing an American. Then, I thought that perhaps her unnuanced, careless, boring performance as a snarky teenager was the problem. Eventually, I just realised that her character was written with none of the nuance, motivation, or path that I desired. She's simply just there. Every time we see her on the screen is time wasted. Who cares at all about her simply creepy romance with a man who has been part of a string quartet with her parents before she was born. We have no real buildup to the relationship; we are just supposed to lap up the drama like any soap opera fan on the hunt for brainless entertainment. The film's resolution was nothing of the sort. We have no idea of the termination of the conflicts between Daniel and Robert or Robert and Jules. You could stick any of the main four together and have no sense of where the character arcs in relation to one another completed. This is not a problem when it adds depth to the film to allow the viewer to assume for themselves and rejoice in creative freedom, but here it felt lazy. We are forced to spend more time on the melodrama away from Walken than with the music, but the film begins and ends with this music. Does this mean that we should not care about the characters, and only the music? Clearly not, because far too many of the conflicts could take place with any profession, characters, or settings. This film could have been so much more. See more 12/18/2020 Too many films, including this messy love quintet, having to do with Beethoven's music mistake his manic depressive pathos for a melodramatic soap opera. See more Read all reviews
A Late Quartet

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Movie Info

Synopsis For 25 years, the Fugue, a string quartet, has wowed music-lovers with its skilled performances. However, as the musicians prepare to celebrate a milestone season together, cellist Peter (Christopher Walken) drops a bombshell on his comrades: he has Parkinson's disease and must soon retire. In the fallout from the shocking announcement, competing egos clash, long-simmering resentments bubble to the surface, and marital infidelity rears its ugly head.
Director
Yaron Zilberman
Producer
Vanessa Coifman, David Faigenblum, Emanuel Michael, Mandy Tagger Brockey, Tamar Sela, Yaron Zilberman
Screenwriter
Yaron Zilberman, Seth Grossman
Distributor
Entertainment One
Production Co
Opening Night
Rating
R (Some Sexuality|Language)
Genre
Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Nov 2, 2012, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Mar 1, 2013
Box Office (Gross USA)
$1.6M
Runtime
1h 45m
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