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Every Thing Will Be Fine
One day, driving aimlessly around the outskirts of town after a trivial domestic quarrel, a writer named Tomas accidentally hits and kills a child. Tomas spends the next 12 years examining the effect of the tragedy on his life and that of Kate, who lost someone close.
31 August 1965, Lévis, Québec, Canada
6 December 1938, Brussels, Belgium
17 November 1978, London, Ontario, Canada
23 February 1970, Montréal, Québec, Canada
21 July 1971, London, England, UK
27 August 1953, Kumla, Örebro län, Sweden
November 13, 2016
...watchable and diverting.January 08, 2016
Angst-filled drama is surprisingly dull and uninteresting.December 04, 2015
Wenders is trying to do new things within the confines of a pretty standard European art-film scenario, and the viewer can see he's not approaching the material as though it's rote ...January 07, 2016
Comparisons to Atom Egoyan's masterful puzzle The Sweet Hereafter would be unfair to this puzzling mass.December 03, 2016
Thrusts clumsiness and obviousness to the fore, rather than complexity and intricacy.January 07, 2016
Not even Wenders seems to understand what this film is trying to say about the human experience.December 17, 2015
Wenders has a history of employing exceptional cinematographers (such as Robby Müller), and here gets fine work from Benoit Debie, whose glowing landscapes and interiors contribute at least as much as the script.February 22, 2016
Even those moments that raise the eyebrows sky-high still have a weird integrity and determination skating under the surface.December 03, 2015
Even for a movie about a writer detached from his emotions, it's ponderous, like a lucid dream gone bad.December 11, 2015
A small but taut drama in which the beautiful physical details jumping off the screen only serve to emphasize an ill-defined setting and major insufficiencies in the script and performances.January 08, 2016
It's a well-photographed story with an intriguing setup, but soon we're mired in a meandering, stilted story with forced dialogue and some surprisingly subpar performances from the talented cast.December 10, 2015
With backing from producers in no less than five countries and director of the gravitas of Wim Wenders - not to mention a solid cast - you'd think Every Thing Will Be Fine would be more impressive than it turns out to be.