By the Sea Review

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Beauty is only skin deep, and By the Sea doesn’t care to go further than that outermost layer.

By Josh Lasser

Hollywood has a fairly long history of individuals who have taken on the task of writing a movie, directing it, and then starring in that same film. There are times when it works (many Woody Allen movies), and there are times when it doesn’t (Yahoo Serious’ Young Einstein). Angelina Jolie Pitt’s new movie, By the Sea, is definitely one of those times when it doesn’t. Not remotely.

Appearing opposite the actress is her husband, Brad Pitt, in this tale of a rich, beautiful, couple with problems all their own. What problems? By the Sea isn’t terribly concerned with that for most of its runtime. It is just one of those bits that the movie feels is irrelevant – it’ll get around to telling the audience eventually, everyone knows that it will, but by the time it does get to it absolutely no one watching will care anymore.

What viewers are treated to for the majority of By the Sea is two self-pitying, self-loathing, self-medicating individuals – Roland (Brad Pitt) and Vanessa (Angelina Jolie Pitt). It is the 1970s (the film consciously tries to ape a style of European cinema from that era) and the two have opted to take a trip to a small seaside town in France so that Roland, a formerly great writer suffering from writer’s block, can write his next book.

Roland loves his wife, but she’s hurting and standoffish. He’s hurting, too. He drinks. She pops pills. They don’t talk, not really. They complain about each other’s bad habits, but they will not address what’s bothering them; not to each other and not to the audience.

I love Video games.First system i ever got was a Atari 2600,Ever since the first time i moved that joystick i was hooked.I have been writing and podcasting about games for 7 years now.I Started Digital Crack Network In 2015 and haven't looked back.

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