Late Bloomers | |
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Directed by | Lisa Steen |
Screenplay by | Anna Greenfield |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | John de Menil |
Edited by | Anisha Acharya |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Vertical Entertainment |
Release date |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Late Bloomers is a 2023 American coming-of-age comedy drama film. It marks the feature length debut for director Lisa Steen, was written by Anna Greenfield, and stars Karen Gillan and Margaret Sophie Stein. It was filmed in New York and produced by We’re Doin’ Great and Park Pictures. The film was shown at the SXSW Festival where it had its world premiere on March 10, 2023.
Louise, an aimless twenty-something musician who is recently single, is injured when she drunkenly breaks her hip. The subsequent physical therapy sees her associate with people twice her age, and she meets Antonina, a Polish lady who speaks no English, and is hired to be her caretaker. [1]
The script was written by Anna Greenfield and based on her personal experiences. Greenfield collaborated on the film with Lisa Steen, whom she had known since college. [2] In July 2022, Karen Gillan, Margaret Sophie Stein, and Jermaine Fowler were revealed to have joined the cast, and principal photography was said to have wrapped in Brooklyn, New York. The film was produced by We're Doin' Great and Park Pictures. [3]
The film had its world premiere at the South by Southwest Festival in Austin, Texas on March 10, 2023. [4] In March 2024, Vertical Entertainment acquired distribution rights to the film. [5]
In Deadline Hollywood, Damon Wise described Late Bloomers as "an intimate, defiantly female-fronted indie, showcasing an engaging and refreshingly vanity-free performance from Karen Gillan". [6] Jason Bailey of The Playlist felt the film was predictable in places and had familiar tropes, but described it as "about as well-acted and enjoyable a version of this particular thing as you're likely to find." [7] Samantha Bergeson of IndieWire gave the film a grade of D, writing that "the film doesn't open up in time to blossom into something great", and its "whispers of emotional depth…come too little and too late." [4]