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Who We Are Now
A drama story that follows a single mother whose husband managed to take their son by law. Now, she struggles to get back custody of her son with the help of a young lawyer. At the same time she gets into a love story with a former US soldier who suffers from a psychological shock.
30 December 1978, New York, New York, USA
12 May 1978, Pompton Plains, New Jersey, USA
23 July 1974, Dallas, Texas, USA
19 December 1961, The Bronx, New York City, New York, USA
14 August 1986, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
27 February 1961, Evanston, Illinois, USA
10 February 1991, Rhinebeck, New York, USA
2 June 1977, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
25 May 1976, San Francisco, California, USA
June 01, 2018
Julianne Nicholson is so compelling as an ex-convict juggling her need for a job that pays enough for her to reclaim her small son that we in the audience can see her nomination possibilities as the awards season approaches.
May 25, 2018
Sometimes feels unfocused, and perhaps too ambitious, yet amid the slightly manipulative structure are some intriguing character dynamics and moments of powerful authenticity.
September 22, 2017
Who We Are Now just ticks too many cliched boxes, particularly in the dialogue department.
October 03, 2017
Newton carved out a raw and unsentimental journey for his protagonists that neither completely absolves them of their mistakes, nor robs them of the agency to make them.
June 28, 2018
The power of Newton's film comes from the way he digs into Beth's vulnerability, depicting her inability to help herself.
May 24, 2018
Fused together by Nicholson's can't-look-away performance, Who We Are Know transcends any directorial quirks.
May 24, 2018
Superbly acted and confidently shot, "Who We Are Now" delivers substantial dramatic pleasures while posing pertinent questions.
May 30, 2018
Warm, wise and thoroughly engrossing. Julianne Nicholson gives a mesmerizing, powerful performance. If there were any justice, she would be nominated for Best Actress this awards season.
September 15, 2017
Told with the full texture of real life, Nicholson's second collaboration with "From Nowhere" filmmaker Matthew Newton is a close-up character study that explores notions of forgiveness and self-worth with surgical precision.
May 23, 2018
Once again, [Newton] refuses to pretend that lives in disarray can be magically repaired by good intentions, while simultaneously avoiding the defeatist attitude that insists there's consequently no point in even trying.
May 30, 2018
Every minute of this film is absolutely mesmerizing.
May 23, 2018
While Nicholson's onscreen, it's impossible to pay heed to anything but her. She scorches the film with her barely bottled ferocity and vulnerability.

