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(2011)

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7/10
Fear of Commitment
evanston_dad16 March 2012
An odd-duck couple who have had plenty of years to be married (read: get bored) and far too much time on their hands decide to adopt a cat. They can't pick it up for a month because it's undergoing some medical treatments, and they're warned that if they fail to arrive on the designated date the cat will be euthanized. The prospect of that last month of freedom before they make a commitment to something other than themselves opens up a fissure in their lives and threatens to destroy a complacency they had begun to take for granted.

The fact that adopting a cat counts in their lives as a commitment great enough to alter their lives forever should tell you a little something about the personalities of these main characters, and if we end up being fed up with both of them, and her especially, I think we're meant to. It's nearly impossible to sympathize with people whose lives are basically so cushy that taking on a pet takes on the momentous proportions of a major life event -- but then I think of my own life, and how good I basically have it, and how good even the most average American basically has it, and how most of my problems would seem pretty petty to a lot of other people out there in the world, and realize that maybe what annoys me about these characters are the qualities I see in them that most annoy me about myself.

"The Future" I think is a cautionary tale about what happens to people when they spend all of their lives worrying about what their lives could be instead of accepting what their lives actually are. At some point, everyone gets to an age where he or she has to simply commit to SOMETHING, whether it be another person, a child, a cause, a pet, a life path, a career. Whatever it is, they have to make a conscious choice to make the best of what they have and stop worrying about what could have been. Easier said than done, probably, or many many people would be much happier.

I liked "The Future" well enough while I was watching it, but I can't say it really stuck with me. Miranda July has an off-beat writing and directorial (not to mention acting) style that will probably turn off some. I'm o.k. with it, and I must say that for once it was refreshing to see a movie in which it's the female rather than the male who does a worse job of dealing with a mid-life crisis. Thank you Ms. July for equaling the playing field a bit.

Grade: B
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7/10
Flash of Light
ferguson-621 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Greetings again from the darkness. Thanks to her 2005 debut film ME AND YOU AND EVERYONE WE KNOW, I became a fan of Miranda July. Unfortunately that means reading a few of her short stories and waiting six years for her second film. There is no rushing creative genius, and there is certainly no obvious goal for capitalistic gains. With her second film, it appears she will somehow generate even fewer viewers, despite being a festival favorite.

The movie is bookended by the narration of Paw-Paw, an injured cat waiting to be adopted by Sophie (Miranda July) and Jason (Hamish Linklater). In the cat's voice we hear the hope of a new life - one that includes love and security. Things aren't quite the same from the perspective of our two heroes.

Sophie and Hamish are in many ways a typical couple. They sometimes speak their own language and when things are going good, they believe they can conquer all. However, hitting a bump means much doubt and and an avalanche of self-defeatist attitudes. The latest bump is the belief that adopting this cat will suck the freedom right out of their daily lives ... in fact, they discuss the fact that because of their age (35), life and dreams are basically over. So, with 30 days til adoption, they seek to live life to the fullest. You know, before it's all over.

They both quit the jobs that have evidently been the burden keeping them from greater purpose. Jason works from home as an IT Help Desk agent and Sophie is the absolute worst dance instructor for kids in existence. Jason tries to find meaning by selling trees to save the environment. Sophie decides to make youtube videos - 30 Dances in 30 Days, but with such mounting pressure, ends up under the bed covers before even one video is complete.

These two remind me of 8 year olds with advanced vocabularies. Somehow they think society or the universe owes them something and just by dreaming big, their lives will be complete. They each believe they have special powers: Sophie can move things with her mind (not really) and Jason can stop time (not sure). We see Jason fall under the spell of the most interesting character in the film - an octogenarian played by Joe Putterlik. We see Sophie fall into bed with Marshall (David Warshofsky), a 50ish single dad living in the suburbs.

So here is some of what the film offers us: a slacker couple in a rundown apartment, same couple overwhelmed by the burden of adopting a cat, a crawling security blanket (t-shirt) that stalks its owner, a narrating cat, an empty affair with a mis-matched couple, an old man philosopher and his dirty-talk greeting cards, a discussion with the moon (yes, the moon), a young girl (wonderful Isabella Acres) who buries herself in the backyard with the approval of her dad, and (twice) the terrific Peggy Lee song "Where or When".

Ms. July is a fabulous observer of life and people and personalities. She seems to understand doubt, dreams and carries an interest in what time lapse really means for us. Her manner of making these points and sharing her insight is quite off-beat from what we typically see in movies. I believe that makes it more important that she continue to produce her works. Unlike what I will say about her character in this film, The Future looks awfully bright for Miranda July.
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7/10
The Future & the broken-hearted lovers.
Controversial The Future is a 2011 film that tells the story of an eccentric couple in their mid 30s who lives in a Los Angeles tiny and bohemian flat. Narrated by Paw-Paw, the injured stray kitten that they have adopted, the film tells how Sophie (Miranda July) and Jason (Hamish Linklater)'s lives change dramatically during the month that they have to wait for taking the cat home. Its initial naiveté ends up being blurred by the shadows provoked by the protagonists' decision to break with their daily routine to fight for their own dreams as if they have been told they have only four weeks to live. Soon the adventure is over and in their blind and desperate search of their paths their steps grow more and more away.

Heartbreaking, absurd, surrealistic, twee and bizarre at the same time, The Future is a piece of independent cinema that cannot be overlooked just because of the presence of disturbing elements such as the talking cat (whose high-pitched, childish voice rumbling in the dark is a powerful beginning by the way). Miranda July, director, writer and star of the film, is not just "being weird for the sake of being weird", but uses fantastic and bizarre images and situations to talk about our biggest taboos: the frailty of love, the futility of dreams, the anxiety about the passage of time and…the fear of death.

With their scruffy curls and their apathetic attitude towards life, Sophie and Jason seem to be the perfect couple. By seeing them lied down on the couch with their feet entangled, the spectator realizes that they felt really comfortable being together. The image of Jason peacefully sleeping over Sophie's chest (sweet for some, twee for others) is also a very faithful representation of true love, as well as Jason's attempt to stop time forever reflects very well how heartbreak feels. Miranda July said in an interview that she intended to describe: "the bittersweet vertigo of true love". Despite the audience does not doubt in the sincerity and profundity of the feelings of the couple, it is forced to see how circumstances and human weakness makes their love begin falling apart.

Firstly, to understand why they (as us ourselves) start panicking when the words "a 5 years commitment" are brought up, it is necessary to come back to the kitten wounded in her paw. Like Paw-Paw, who patiently waits for the couple to start his real life (she's even counting the days), we are always waiting for something good to happen, for the real beginning of our lives. And when we reach the thirties, we start to question ourselves if that beginning is not already gone, get depressed for having wasted the first half of our life and look at the future even more anxiously than before.

This is more or less what happens to Sophie and Jason, whom the idea of looking after a kitten -requiring a total care- for the next five years of their lives, make them think of their (scary) future: "We're 35 now ... by the time the cat dies, we'll be 40 ... and 40 might as well be 50 ... and after that, spare change." "Spare change?" "Less than a dollar-- not enough to get anything you want …" Jason's words reflect our anxiety about the passage of time as we cannot help feeling frustrated when the years pass by without us having reached the milestones we set for ourselves. Nonetheless in the film July, who said of life "I rush through it, like I'm being chased", warns us about the dangers that this feeling of "being always late" (late to live?) provokes. The Future not only make us consider how useless is to be always projecting into when it's going to be "better", but also make us question the importance of our lifetime dreams. It kind of helps us to get rid of the endless frustration caused by the contrast between our high expectations and our day-to-day reality. Like Sophie and Jason, everyone suffers from the Cervantine conflict, that is to say, the conflict between the world as we have imagined it and the world as it is. The story of Sophie and Jason somehow questions the futility of dreams, often unattainable and absurd (remembering Jason's: "I always thought I'd be a world leader").

How is it possible we cannot live happily just because we have not achieved some pretentious (generally childish) life goals? The Future, although has not the answer to the question, teaches us to open our eyes to our own limitations and stop feeling as if we deserved something better in life so as to start really enjoying ours. Life is not about waiting things to happen, but making things happen, as July said in No One Belongs Here More Than You: "Don't wait to be sure. Move, move, move"

July says that she intended to describe "the bittersweet vertigo of true love". Here an intense fear (vertigo) is intimately linked to an intense love, as imagining spending a whole life with someone is scary because from the beginning everyone already knows how the story ends, one dying in the arms of the other. Hence marriage makes you inevitably realize your own mortality and finiteness.

Some optimism is hidden, nevertheless, behind the pessimistic tone of the film. No matter what happens we always have to remember the enigmatic words of Joe Putterlik played by Joe Putterlik himself, an eccentric old man who Miranda met in a street market. This old man who participated in the film shortly before dying, tell us with his example that until you are dead, never is too late to live. So remember: "This is just the beginning".

"Life is not about waiting for the storm to pass, it is about learning to dance in the rain"

Anonymous
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Open for Interpretation
anonymousspks17 August 2011
I was excitedly waiting for this film to appear in the cozy theater in my town. I really enjoyed Me and You and Everyone We Know. When I saw the trailer for The Future I thought the character Sophie is very similar to Christine in the previous film. The feeling of both films are very similar and I say that as a compliment; it gives Miranda July her own unique voice in film.

When I watched the film I regretted having seen the trailer, as it gave away a lot of the key points in the story. I think this is a very good film portraying relationships between couples. I could see a lot of symbols in the film pointing at the gender stereotypes everyone is affected by as being part of a patriarchal society. I like the concept of the cat representing the union of the two people, and how Miranda shows pets in relation to the other couples in the story to show whether or not their relationship survived/withstood time. I think this film provokes thoughts and is meant to make people reflect about their relationships with others. It shows that miscommunication, fear of confrontation, fear of being ourselves, is what breaks relationships. He cannot love her if he doesn't love himself. She cannot love him if she doesn't love herself. We can't have decent relationships when we're not being honest with ourselves. Being honest with another person, loving the other person, comes second to being honest and loving yourself.

I don't understand why this film has so many negative comments in the reviews. I truly enjoyed this and hope to see Miranda continue with more projects.
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7/10
Deep - if you have a working brain, heart, and eyes
Stay_away_from_the_Metropol28 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
First, I just have to state how highly amusing I find it that SO many people tear this movie apart for 1. "trying too hard to be artsy and cool for hipsters without actually having any real purpose or plot" (just as they did with her first film) and 2. "Too depressing...just horrible". If it depressed you, especially THAT intensely, that shows that the film was HIGHLY EFFECTIVE - that does not mean it is a bad film and deserves 1 star out of 10! If it made you feel sad, that means the film has accomplished something! The film is simply not for you!

As far as finding the movie to be trying too hard, well that's more left up for interpretation - but for me I find Miranda July's scenarios and dialogue to be very genuine and straight from the heart, a lot of it makes me laugh and a lot of it I can relate with. Just because Miranda is not afraid to ignore all the rules and take her films wherever she feels like taking them does not mean that she is trying too hard does it?

A lot of people come out of this movie feeling sad and confused. But, I can honestly say there was not a single scene in the movie I felt confused about. There was a lot of extremely creative imagery and conceptual stuff, but it was all relative to the PLOT (YES, THERE WAS A PLOT - LIFE CATCHING UP ON US AND BITING US IN THE BUTT WHEN WE'RE LEAST EXPECTING IT? that's a pretty simple summary that works just fine). I related emotionally to a few scenes specifically, especially the one with Hamish Linklater outside by the ocean - I thought it was a perfect metaphorical representation of an emotional phase I cannot discuss otherwise it would be a spoiler!

So basically, the film has a lot to offer, but it's quiet and abstract. If you're not open to art and scenarios that are left up to you to interpret, then don't watch the movie - but aside from that, the film really has a lot to offer and a lot to relate about.

Good stuff, Miranda. I am a fan. Keep doing what you're doing, please.
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6/10
Everything you'd expect from a Miranda July film; quirky, oddball & silly
chaz-2818 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Any audience member who has seen a previous Miranda July film knows what they are in for if they go to another one. July loves silly and awkward conversations which spring out of thin air and make her characters seem quirky. If you love quirky and oddball then Miranda July is the filmmaker for you. However, July is one of those filmmakers who do not have much a gray area when it comes to reactions. Movie goers either love her or cannot stand her.

July's latest film is The Future. Sophie (July) and Jason (Hamish Linklater) have been in a relationship for four years and live together in Los Angeles. They have steady jobs, her as a dance teacher for kids and him in the IT sector. One day, this couple makes a huge decision; they decide to adopt a cat. Yes, for this couple, this is a gigantic and tortuous decision. The cat is hurt and in a veterinary hospital so they much wait for one month before than can bring him home. Also, the cat has a speaking role. Miranda July supplies its voice-over narration. If you have seen a previous July film, this will not surprise you in the least.

Sophie and Jason now believe they have one month of freedom left. Once the cat arrives, everything will change; they will have responsibility, they will grow old, and then they will die. One month. Therefore, they quit their jobs and follow their individual quests not so much for self improvement or to follow their dreams, but to follow whatever happens to cross their path. I will stop the synopsis there so as to give away any of the more odd and yes, quirky, plot turns.

I really enjoyed July's last film, Me and You and Everyone We Know. It was a pleasant blend of dialogue and original filmmaking. The Future is not quite as enjoyable because now I am waiting for the next awkward and quirky conversation to start. Another overarching and enjoyable element to a July film is a sense of depression and melancholy which the characters have. They are neither steadily happy nor sad, but it looks like they feel some sort of weight in their otherness. Sophie and Jason are not like a normal couple. They play silly games like pretending to stop time and agree on a song they would play if one of them lost their entire memory.

Sometimes there can be too much quirky and even for what is a simple film, July can get a bit too symbolic and the audience might miss a metaphor or three. However, some of scenes are quite amusing to watch and this film is a breath of fresh air from superhero extravaganzas and anything you find at the local 34 screen multiplex.
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6/10
Failing To Fulfil Promises
nick-615-6077021 March 2022
An odd film seemingly about a couple, Jason and Sophie who are stuck in a relationship going nowhere

They lead a samey existence and reach a crossroads in their relationship. Just before this point they help an old stray cat, unsure whether they will be together to look after the cat the rest of its life they eventually decide they will adopt it and promise to return in 30 days.

Jason quits his job as a phone based IT support to educate the public of environmental issues disguised as tree selling. Sophie randomly find the telephone number of a man on the reverse of a painting and makes contact.

Jason finds an older guy who finds purpose in his life selling objects. Sophie discovers the restrictions of a suburban lifestyle.

Throughout this is the story of Paw Paw, the cat. A cat happy with his lot but then for the first time ever has discovered the human touch. Paw Paw is careful not to show too much to the humans but inside is ready for this move, indeed it seems it has been waiting it's whole life for someone to pick it up and want to care, and play and love this cat.
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9/10
Loved it. Hated it. Then loved it again.
rooprect22 January 2013
"The Future" is an excellent, surreal, cold comedy in the tradition of the great Spike Jonze & Charlie Kaufman films "Adaptation", "Being John Malkovich" and the brain-blasting "Synecdoche NY".

"Cold comedy" is a term I just made up to describe the way they make me feel. They make me laugh, but I also feel an uneasy chill up my spine. Maybe it's because the underlying story is somewhat cynical, with a chilly, brooding philosophy of life. But these films manage to poke fun of this hopeless condition in a way that tickles your funny bone.

I preface this review with a warning. As often, whoever wrote the DVD packaging is an idiot. This is definitely NOT a "whimsical romantic comedy" or whatever they advertise. So if you're expecting something cute & fun like "When Harry Met Sally", you might want to move on. Instead, what we get is a very, VERY oddball farce centered around a young clueless couple. If you liked "(500) Days of Summer" which, itself, is prefaced with the narration "This is not a love story", then keep reading because you'll probably like this movie too.

If you're an animal lover, particularly someone who has rescued a dog or cat from the local pound, you'll be drawn in instantly. The story begins through the eyes of a stray cat "Paw Paw" in a shelter, nervously waiting to be adopted by the couple before time runs out. The voice of the cat becomes the voice of wisdom throughout the film. I've never seen a film that takes such a thoughtful & innocent approach as through the eyes of a raggedy, injured cat waiting at the pound.

The first half of the movie is so bizarrely funny, with such unique characters living in their private bizarre bubble, it feels something like "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure". But now imagine "Bill & Ted" if it were directed by French New Wave filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard. Starting to get the picture...? In the director's commentary on the DVD, writer/director/star Miranda July calls this a very "still" movie. There are long breaks between characters speaking. There is a lot of silence, allowing us to soak in the depth of the moment. She jokes about one scene where the leading man dramatically rips off his headphones, and she calls it the big action scene, the equivalent of a car crash in this movie. Haha.

The slow, deadpan delivery makes the humor even more pervasive. I laughed out loud several times in the first half. But midway through the movie, the mood shifts suddenly and drastically. The remaining half is no longer a comedy but more like a soul-searching philosophical adventure. At first I hated the unexpected change (as the title of this review implies) because I was really enjoying the oddball comedy.

But, as the recurring theme of the movie implies, "the beginning" is only temporary. Life changes drastically. Love changes drastically. The plot, theme and mood of the film illustrate this perfectly. I can't say much more without ruining the story, so just be ready for anything. Ride this crazy roller-coaster to the end.

The acting and particularly the casting is flawless. The chemistry between the two leads, Sophie (Miranda July) and Jason (Hamish Linklater) is so perfect you'd think they're soulmates in real life. Another excellent piece of casting is Joe Putterlik who plays the old man. He is NOT an actor! Miranda found him while answering an ad in the Pennysaver classifieds, and she was so taken by his authenticity that she cast him in the role.

Another thing I really enjoyed was the great use of symbolism. You have to pay close attention, or even see the movie twice like I did, to catch most of it. Especially in the 2nd half when things become very poetic and sublime, you have to be on your toes.

If you like surreal comedy, like the films I mentioned earlier, films by Spike Jonze, Charlie Kaufman, Michel Gondry ("Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind", "The Science of Sleep"), the early Johnny Depp flick "Arizona Dream", the Paul Giamatti comedy "Cold Souls", or maybe even the grandfather of modern surreal comedy "Catch 22", don't hesitate to see this movie. See them all. Whenever I stumble on a film like this, I'm reminded that cinema is a true art form.
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7/10
Sam Beckett's Cat
Lugodoc22 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
A retarded couple decide to adopt a cat and arrange to collect one from a sanctuary in a month's time when it has finished medical treatment. They are warned that if they fail to collect on time it will be euthenized. Realising that this awesome responsibility will mean the end of their old lives they decide to live the next month as if it is their last. He quits his old job and finds an even worse one, while she quits hers and seeks fame as an internet sensation, failing miserably. She either consoles or punishes herself for this with a shallow sexual relationship with an older creep who makes his young daughter dig her own grave then buries her in it up to her neck at night. Her depressed boyfriend consoles himself by confiding in an octogenarian philosopher, and the moon. They are both so absorbed by their own pathetic little problems that they miss the deadline and the cat is put down.

The cat knows nothing of any of this, only that it is going to be adopted some time in the near future. In its occasional monologues to us it describes its joy at knowing that soon it will be taken home by a kind, caring couple and that it will never be cold, or wet, or hungry, or lonely ever again. After death it describes its surprise at finding itself, in spirit, still in the same cage, apparently for ever.

I'm a cat lover and this broke my heart. As soon as the film finished I found my cats and made a huge fuss of them to cheer myself up. They thought I had gone soft in the head.

Samuel Becket wrote plays about people like this, infuriating because of their inertia, their complete inability to move forward with their lives and find joy, or even authentic misery. His plays only make sense to me if I decide that these are not characters but thoughts inside someone's head. His plays are about unproductive thought, the ideas that stop us from finding the will power to seize control of our own lives and instead make us weak and passive. The pathetic 30-something couple are a circular internal monologue that cannot be defeated through discourse, an ego game that can only be abandoned altogether by an act of will. The cat is a baby, a better job, a better house, a move to another town, or anything that promises the possibility of change, unless it is forgotten about because the thinker cannot rise above his/her ego games.

The cat is The Future.

Cat lovers: does that help you to feel any better?
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1/10
Animal lovers beware!
praisercheri20 September 2019
If you want to see a film about empty headed yuppies who care only about themselves, this is your movie.

If you however, care about the plight of animals in shelters, this will break your heart.

Terrible movie. (I wasn't going to give it even one star, but there are a couple of humorous moments.)
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8/10
very pleasantly surprised
pattersonovsky13 August 2011
I went into this film with low expectations because it seemed as though it would be just another film full of contrived quirks and gratuitous plot twists meant to seem original, and while my husband is a full-force Miranda July fan, I can take or leave her work.

But I was floored by how good it was. Perhaps due in part to my lower expectations. But I thought it was touching and poignant - and very funny (the whole theater laughed out loud a few times). I cried at the beginning, and I cried (sobbed, really, while having to cover my mouth to mute myself) at the end. I really enjoyed July and Hamish Linklater; especially Linklater, who seemed like a more accessible character while July still bordered on the wide-eyed, "unique" indie-chick stereotype. Though she did break through that enough moments in the film for me to enjoy her character. The cat monologues that I had cringed at when I read about them prior to seeing the film actually worked quite well for me.

I don't think this is a movie I'll re-watch often in The Future, but it's definitely one I think people should see at least once or twice.
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6/10
Thought-provoking but tries a bit too hard to be quirky
blott2319-12 August 2021
The Future is a film that is overflowing with ideas, but doesn't seem to have enough focus to turn those ideas into a solid story. Despite its Charlie Kaufman-esque qualities, I was genuinely intrigued by the concept of this movie. It's an interesting exploration of life and relationships, particularly when it comes to the way time passes relative to what you are doing (and plan to do in the future.) I enjoyed the quirky couple in the film, and was totally interested to see how they would handle their fears. The first act of the movie was genuinely funny to me, and I got some good laughs at their strange personalities. Then as the story progressed it was fun to see them face their fears of commitment and the inevitability of death. They probably aren't the best role models, but that didn't stop me from enjoying their banter back and forth.

Some of the more supernatural/surreal moments in The Future worked perfectly for me, but it always felt like Miranda July took it a bit too far. For instance, I was on board for the magic of time stopping in a moment, but struggled with how it got going again. Also, the resolution of the cat's story left something to be desired, but I won't spoil all of that for you. I really do admire what Miranda July was trying to do in The Future, and it had me reeled in from start to finish. While I might not totally understand everything it's trying to say, and I certainly don't like all that happened in the film, the fact that I'm still thinking about it weeks later is a sign that something special is going on. Unlike most non-linear films that lack a traditional narrative, The Future is one I could see myself rewatching just to try and figure it out.
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1/10
Pretentious, unwatchable drivel
Rob_Taylor24 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
So, I need to stop watching these so-called "art" films. They inevitably make me hate them, no matter what the supposed subject materiel is.

This, I think is why I have a problem with them: They are uniformly marketed as something other than what they are. In the case of "The Future", the synopsis is this:

"When a couple decides to adopt a stray cat their perspective on life changes radically, literally altering the course of time and space and testing their faith in each other and themselves."

It's also billed as a scifi movie, and the synopsis seems to support that. It all sounds quite interesting, right?

Wrong! This movie doesn't deserve to wear the label scifi. There's no science in it and the only fiction is in the horribly bad marketing. So I should blame the distributors for how bad this movie is, I guess?

Wrong! The blame for this mess really needs to lie with Miranda July. I've never come across her work before and now, I guarantee I'll never do so again. Writer, Actor, Director. She's all those things in this movie and it shows.... Shows that some people should stick to one thing and not try to Doc Savage their life and be fantastic at everything, because, quite frankly, she isn't up to the jobs.

The writing is childish because the characters are intensely unlikeable. I suspect that may be the point - to make the audience hate them, but making unlikeable characters only accomplishes one thing in any form of storytelling - to alienate the audience. Once you've done that, it doesn't matter what the rest of the story is about, because the viewer just doesn't care.

Her acting is also weak. I understand this was her vision and by donning all these hats she got to make it how she wanted, but damn! As far as entertainment goes, this wasn't so much of a dropped ball as more of a ball punted into the distance off a cliff! It's pretentious nonsense full of "clever" symbolism, using the cat as a kind of conscience for the characters. However, the two characters could never exist in reality because of their inherent flaws. They would never succeed at anything, even surviving to adulthood would be beyond them! To call them ineffectual would be liking suggesting that a saucepan made out of chocolate would be fantastic! And, like that saucepan, the characters would not last long.

There's nothing here that fits the traditional role of a movie. I'm beginning to suspect that film isn't a proper medium for such efforts. Whether that will dissuade Ms. July from further stunningly boring efforts to make a point to an audience that mostly just wants to be entertained is anyone's guess. I doubt it.

It also galls me that scifi (my favourite genre) is being saddled by these movies since it allows the writer/director to apparently throw any crazy sh*t at the screen and hope it sticks. That isn't what scifi is about!

All in all, if you are looking for an entertaining movie, don't stop here! You'll be disappointed. If, on the other hand, you are looking to throw away ninety minutes of your existence in an unsatisfying endeavour, I would suggest going to the coast and commanding the rising tide to turn back would be more fruitful than watching this "film".

And now, in the interest of balanced reporting...

SUMMARY FOR ART LOVERS: A wonderful exploration of the neuroses of two desperately unhappy people, with commentary by their cat. Woot!

SUMMARY FOR NORMAL FILM-GOERS: Unsatisfying, pretentious drivel featuring hateful characters and leading to a frustrating and deeply annoying end. Trim your toe nails instead.
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Should life be based on Carpe Diem or not?
marleza7 May 2012
Thanks to Miranda July and her movie called The Future, we are offered a complex and peculiar story surrounded by an environment of insecurity that makes us wonder about our personal life expectancies. A couple in their thirties decides to adopt an abandoned cat. The cat has an injured leg, and so, they have to wait for a month until it is recovered from its illness to take it with them. Meanwhile, they start to think that they have to enjoy their last month of freedom, because the cat would not allow them to do so any longer.

The cat only appears physically once at the movie, but it has much more importance than that. In fact, it is the narrator. It helps the audience to be put into context, and it sometimes gives sense to some parts of the film that seem to be incoherent. A part from having an important leading role, it will be the one to break out the whole action; the fact of having decided to adopt it will be the turning point of a story that, at first, seemed to be set in a calm atmosphere.

Some important aspects of life are tackled. For instance, the uncertainty of the future is clearly shown. We have to assume that that is the way it is, we are in control of it, but we are not able to know about it. So, life would not be all about wanting to know more about the future, but to be ready to face what comes next. If we stop to think about the future we do not have enough time to live the present. We spend our daily life worried about the future, and what if that future does not exist?

The entire film is enveloped in an enormous pessimism. The way in which the characters act makes us predict that there is no energy in them and they are likely to lose. Instead of taking into account the advantages that life can offer to them, they only see problems around. They even see the fact of taking care of an abandoned animal as a problem, when that should be taken as a satisfaction. That offers the audience the possibility to decide if that behavior is right for you or not; it is a film that would make people think. Furthermore, it is a movie that favors self-reflection. Although the development of the movie does not make the moral to become evident, one can use the film as the starting point of a personal thought with a clear moral: It does not really matter what will happen next, we have to enjoy the everyday and make the most of it.
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7/10
unique, auteur-ish
ignominia-119 January 2012
This movie made me think of the work of Godard, movies that are more about artistic expression and experimentation than about telling a story. There are a lot of elements in the movie, and July's way of expressing her ideas are so personal that I find difficult to say what the main story is about except that it shows the confusion we live our lives, a confusion that is emotional and existential. The characters act and reason unlike regular people (at least unlike people I know) but not so that weirdness takes center stage -as in David Lynch's movies for example. I have seen most of July's work and I would say she definitely has her own voice, and a very distinct one. The movie leaves you puzzling about for days, sign that it has made a dent in your subconscious and I find those are the best enough to want to see it over and over again, like all good movies and at should leave you.
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6/10
Weirdness & All It's Miserable Company
okobii7 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Sophie and Jason are an average cute couple whose lives change dramatically when they decide to adopt a cat. They don't get to adopt the cat, but the simple thought of having to compromise themselves to something that's more or less permanent, is enough to turn their world around. Until the day that they go to the veterinarian, they didn't even seem to consider the future, they lived day to day but adopting Paw Paw makes them realize that they have so many plans in their minds that won't become a reality if they keep living that way and that is when they commence to think about the future, when things go wrong and they start to freak out. The funny thing is that their lives were perfectly fine until they begin to get scared regarding their future. They try to give some kind of direction to their lives and start independent projects to supposedly fulfill their dreams but their so-called dreams are soon killed by their own limitations. This is even sadder when you realize their dreams were quite mediocre (who's lifelong dream is to post videos of be what may on youtube?) they weren't anything if not dull. This is probably what made Sophie throw away what was a perfectly sweet, tender, common relationship. She suddenly got scared and insecure of her own failures. She was incapable of accepting the fact that she failed to fulfill her dream without anything being in the way of its achievement except for herself and she did get in her own way so she decided to carry out a double life in which she's herself and another one in which she's a middle aged girlfriend of a middle class man who lives in an average house and has nothing to worry about but being ordinary and not being herself.

I won't lie. This is one heck of a strange film maybe too metaphysical for my complete comprehension. The fact that the cat plays the part of a narrator might be a bit too much but it is true that the false comedy makes up for all the strangeness. It's engagingly funny and the two main characters are absolutely delightful. She's adorable in her own bizarre manner while he's nothing if not noble, genuine and kind. They both make such a graceful couple.

If I really dig into the film I could maybe squeeze out the conclusion that Jason runs from the parenthood that Paw Paw represented while Sophie got scared at first but later decided to follow her instinct and form a family with Marshall and his daughter. However it seems that the storyline crosses over to the superficial side. There doesn't seem to be a purpose for the cat-puppet to have such a strange voice, the music being intentionally alternative, the couple to be so extremely naive, the talking moon, the lifelong dream of a person being to post videos on youtube, a girl digging a hole to sleep in in her own back yard, and why on earth is Jason able to stop time? And why would Marshall want to meet a woman whose phone conversation clearly depicts her as insane? Anyway it seems all too bohemian this film gives the impression that it's purposely made out to be different from the rest.
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7/10
Hate
maxphotog20 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I gave this film a 7 because of the emotional response to the cruelty demonstrated by the characters in the film.

These characters destroyed the hope of an innocent being.

I had more feelings for the poor cat than I did for either character. That their complacency and cruel disregard for the promise of unfulfilled hope they gave to this poor animal led to an innocent beings death.

Truly despicable that they should allow such innocence to perish because of their stupidity and selfish disregard for life.

Both characters should have perished in the end for the cruel ending they brought upon an innocent creature who's hopes were destroyed by an undeserved death.

To allow to die through false hope is terribly cruel to an innocent creature.
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1/10
I have watched over 9000 movies, I've chosen this as the worst.
thadirtydog18 May 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This film has an amazing idea which could have made it a favorite of mine. I could have lived through the boring lives of the cast if the main character PawPaw the kitty LIVED. I don't expect movies to have a happy ending every time but when the whole idea of the movie is built to have that outcome only to have it end with the viewer thinking, "OMG why did they make this movie? They wanted to take a part of my heart and stomp on it for no reason? This is insane!"

The person who saw it with me said, "stupid stupid awful traumatizing heart wrenching movie that killed it's best point of the whole damn thing."
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8/10
Still thinking, still affected...
williamjack21 December 2011
Hmmm...the summary title says it all. Not quite sure what this film is saying or trying to stimulate you into thinking about: lack of purpose in modern life, the small actions on which lasting love lives or dies, how much of ourselves do we show to each other, emotional paralysis in an atomised first world, the value of human connection above all else, is man designed to run on any other fuel than god, artistic frustration and how beautiful creation can take place as much in your living room as the main stage at the Met, people looking for a place in a senseless world instead of just getting on and helping people... On the downside the dialogue and some of the acting is of the low-burn, snail pace that can destroy any sense of mood or tension...but on the upside there are perhaps 10 moments of absolute beauty, each worth admission alone, and Miranda July is an open wound of a screen presence. And I'm still thinking about the end and all the bits in between. Personally I'm prepared to be slightly confused when I come out highly affected and thinking...
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6/10
Too much of the Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
natsnock23 March 2012
I became a fan of Miranda July after watching her debut movie, and expected this one with curiosity to see what quirks she'll prepare for us this time. And that's what probably spoils it all for her and her fans - expecting quirky story, acting and directing - because there it is, but I couldn't stop thinking how much this reminds me of The Eternal Sunshine of The Spotless Mind, no matter how different the films may be. Take away the talking cat, the fantastic metaphorical stopping of time, the strange dances - and it falls apart, what's left is just enough for a short movie, and a student short movie, with foreseeable plot.
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2/10
Losers
mrlkt23 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I don't even care about the rest of the movie because they left Paw Paw to die. They deserve to suffer the pain they caused each other.
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8/10
on crossing the shadow line
evlasky8329 November 2011
July's film depicts the quirkiness and clumsiness of those who are, as Conrad put it, about to cross the "twilight between youth and maturity", struggling with their call to adult life (in the form of parenthood, career, responsibility).

Although it speaks about a universal topic, there are many hints in the movie that point to our current generation. One for instance: accumulating whatever mundane knowledge on the internet, instead of sitting still and trying to think. So noughties.

I don't want to say more. If you are, let's say, in your mid 30s, urbanite, have studied liberal arts, and still struggle (or even better: wait) to define yourself, please watch this movie. You will find a part of yourself, and part of the answer to your questions.
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6/10
Film Review - The Future (2011) 6.1/10
lasttimeisaw11 July 2020
"The time-warping part is fantasticated right before Sophie's intending confession as Jason refuses her to do so by squarely stopping the time, and in a paralleled universe, Sophie vividly experiences her new bourgeois life with Marshall, until she is jolted back to her past by the presence of 'shirty', her favorite mustard t-shirt now becomes an ambulatory costume and creepily slithers into her bedroom."

read my full review on my blog: cinema omnivore, thanks
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1/10
It doesn't do what it says on the box!
shepheards19 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This film carried a review on the box which described it at 'loaded with laugh out loud lines' so we settled down to watch expecting some light hearted American (so not too side splitting) whimsical comedy which had something to do with a cat....... the dialogue was dreadful, the characters mumble and make it hard to non Americans to understand what they were saying but worst of all the cat's story was totally heart breaking - this is no 'laugh out loud' film it's dark and only serves to point up the awful selfishness of human beings. Everyone starts off miserable and they all end up worse off - particularly the cat! Don't watch it if you are a cat/animal lover, in fact don't watch it all unless you are contemplating suicide and need that 'extra push'.
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