Adam Reid's smart, poignant trilogy of interwoven vignettes, manages the considerable feat of creating six fully human characters who are quirky enough to transcend the stereotypes found in a typical indie film.
Though it can occasionally seem like an indie-dramedy answer to "The Grudge," structured to pack in the maximum moments of whimsical connection instead of supernatural kills, the film does find something deeper in its treatment of Smith and Lloyd.
60
New York Daily NewsElizabeth Weitzman
New York Daily NewsElizabeth Weitzman
The parts are ultimately greater than the whole, but Adam Reid's offbeat debut suggests a talent worth watching.
50
Slant MagazineChuck Bowen
Slant MagazineChuck Bowen
Hello Lonesome isn't really that much of a movie, but it has something that a number of more polished pictures in the same vein don't: human decency. Sadly, that's noteworthy.
Each of the three intercut stories in Hello Lonesome - all dealing with characters trying to overcome solitude - begins promisingly enough. Eventually, though, they all run aground on questionable decisions.
40
Village VoiceNick Pinkerton
Village VoiceNick Pinkerton
The same laxity given to the performers extends, unfortunately, to the film's structuring, a lazy Susan rotation between storylines and monotonous settings.