A young woman decides to make positive changes in her life by training for the New York City Marathon.A young woman decides to make positive changes in her life by training for the New York City Marathon.A young woman decides to make positive changes in her life by training for the New York City Marathon.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 7 nominations total
Juri Henley-Cohn
- David
- (as Juri Henley Cohn)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Based on a true story, Jillian Bell plays Brittany, a woman with insecurities and an unhealthy lifestyle, who is told by a doctor that it would be healthier for her to lose weight. This leads her on a path to discovery and eventual plans to run a marathon. I found this to have a generally good uplifting story, but the specific parts don't all work. The script could'v gone through another revision.
There are moments where the humor and dialogue really snaps and others where they don't work at all and scenes feel drawn out or superfluous. Brittany herself at times can be very sympathetic with real world doubts, but at other times her negative actions are so over-the-top that you can't relate to her.
Speaking of Brittany, Jillian Bell does a great job in the role. Many of us have probably seen her in things over the years, such as 22 Jump Street and Date Night, but she's mostly been a supporting player. It's nice to see her take center stage and show that she can do a bit of drama.
This movie is shot interestingly. It uses bright colors like a comedy but uses handheld camerawork and has sort of a more down-to-Earth feel.
As a feel-good movie, I thinks this works more than it doesn't. Just don't expect perfection.
There are moments where the humor and dialogue really snaps and others where they don't work at all and scenes feel drawn out or superfluous. Brittany herself at times can be very sympathetic with real world doubts, but at other times her negative actions are so over-the-top that you can't relate to her.
Speaking of Brittany, Jillian Bell does a great job in the role. Many of us have probably seen her in things over the years, such as 22 Jump Street and Date Night, but she's mostly been a supporting player. It's nice to see her take center stage and show that she can do a bit of drama.
This movie is shot interestingly. It uses bright colors like a comedy but uses handheld camerawork and has sort of a more down-to-Earth feel.
As a feel-good movie, I thinks this works more than it doesn't. Just don't expect perfection.
So, you're not wrong, Andrea, but you have it twisted. I am not going to get into it, but I dumbfoundedly shocked by this movie. It was honest, funny, not at all preachy or perfect, relatable on multiple levels and moving. For a fat guy who is trying, always trying, it was clear this movie was made by people who understand the struggle of the human condition. And not necessarily just those of being fat. This was more than about a fat girl who becomes a good normal. There were portions of the dialogue I wanted to record and send to others in my life, and portions I wanted to record and send to myself. IDK yet, but this movie could easily become one of my favorite movies of the year.
If anyone sees it and disagrees, you have to let me know why, because this movie was so touching and entertaining, I actually can't imagine how that would be the case.
If anyone sees it and disagrees, you have to let me know why, because this movie was so touching and entertaining, I actually can't imagine how that would be the case.
Jillian Bell belongs to the tribe of comedic supporting actresses who often shines brighter than the pretty female lead of the movie. In 22 Jump Street and Rough Night, she was the only thing that held my attention.
So when I checked the cast and realized that she had been given star billing, I was happy. I expected an average, soapy, fell good, warm-under-the-blankets movie, considering the subject of the movie.
And I was glad to have been wrong. It was not an average movie; it was a very good one.
Brittany Runs A Marathon goes beyond the normal superficial fat-person-gets-a-scare-gets-fit-gets-happy-ending story. Yes, it does have those aspects to it, but it goes deeper than most New York-based young woman coming of age stories.
First off, Brittany is a smart person who is barely surviving in the big city, held hostage to the gig economy that has run amok in the US for income. She is stuck with a group of friends who look down on her and string her along to make them feel superior. Her roommate Gretchen (singer and YouTuber Alice Lee in a thankless role) is one of those conventionally pretty young woman who wants to become a social media star, who keeps Brittany around to pad her own insecurities. She is the fat girl of the group, and as a defense mechanism, she develops a great sense of humour (a high speed wit that definitely stands out among the various funny-as-a-defence-mechanism characters I have seen in many movies). She has the fast, club, drug lifestyle; everything a 30-something New York girl can be expected to be like.
The movie, after taking some time to develop her surroundings, starts delving into the story when she invariably has to go the doctor to score some prescription drugs. The doctor, very subtly and sincerely without judgement, advices her to drop 50 pounds in bodyweight. Alarmed at the health situation she's facing, she goes to the gym, and realizes it's too expensive for her (yet another 21st century problem which drives people away from fitness), and decides to take up running.
The scenes were she starts to run is one of the best scenes regarding mental health that I have seen in movies. She looks out at her footpath, and the surroundings, and is hesitant. Doubts run through her mind, and somehow, she wills herself to run one block. She does, and is completely winded. The next day, she runs another. Soon, she decides to make this an important habit in her life, and even joins Moneybags Martha (a delightful Michalea Watkins, a fellow SNL alumnus) in her running group. She makes another novice runner friend, Seth (a very good-looking Micah Stock). Meanwhile, as Brittany realizes Gretchen might not have her best interests at heart, she goes less and less out with her, and her relationship with Gretchen, slowly deteriorates.
Brittany lucks out with one of her pet sitting gigs, where she decides to stay when the owners are traveling around the world, and she also meets (Utkarsh Ambudkar), a fellow millennial who is stuck in a rut.
After finishing a 2 mile marathon and later a 5k run, Brittany is determined to finish in the prestigious New York Marathon, and throws herself into her new lifestyle. But progress is not always smooth and linear, like how most sports movies make it seem. She relapses into bad habits occasionally, is hard at herself for it, and punishes herself with grueling schedules. Along the way, the movie opens up her deeper emotional issues. Every time Brittany seems to be on the verge of making a genuine milestone, something happens which triggers the old insecurities. We go into the story of her parents' divorce and her love towards her late father, and how her brother-in-law took care of her. Her defense mechanism, which helped her during hard times with her father and later in school, have been holding back her progress, and slowly but steadily, she learns to let people who have good intentions towards her into her life. She opens up to Seth and Catherine, formerly known as Moneybags Martha, and decides to apply for jobs that she trained for. She decides to change her relationship with Jern into a healthy one, and makes boundaries with him.
The movie, written and directed by a man, based on the true story of his best friend, seems to be surprisingly realistic towards the experience of a woman who is physically and psychologically unhealthy on her journey towards healing her wounds. This is Brittany's story, and that means we get to see her at her best but also at her worst, many times, as she tries to drag herself out of her personal hellhole. The viewer is privy to not just her light speed wit and funny one-liners, but also acerbic and cruel comments, both borne out of her deeper psychological wounds. The subtleness and great care shown by the writer-director in depicting every aspect of a self-empowerment journey is what makes this movie stand out among such movies.
The cinematography on New York is well done, with minimal use of extravagant, beautiful shots that are a staple of rom-coms set in the city. The lighting is very appropriate to the scenes. The colors are bright whenever Brittany is in New York doing her thing, but goes darker when she goes into one of her dark phases, which I thought was a nice touch. A little care with editing, especially the inclusion of the epilogue would have made this a taut movie, but it seemed like the director decided to give Brittany her happy ending. He seemed to have been reminded by someone that too much realism could sometimes turn off people who came to watch a feel-good movie, apparently.
DIRECTION 7 SCREENPLAY 7 ACTING 7.5 CINEMATOGRAPHY 7
VERDICT: 7/10
So when I checked the cast and realized that she had been given star billing, I was happy. I expected an average, soapy, fell good, warm-under-the-blankets movie, considering the subject of the movie.
And I was glad to have been wrong. It was not an average movie; it was a very good one.
Brittany Runs A Marathon goes beyond the normal superficial fat-person-gets-a-scare-gets-fit-gets-happy-ending story. Yes, it does have those aspects to it, but it goes deeper than most New York-based young woman coming of age stories.
First off, Brittany is a smart person who is barely surviving in the big city, held hostage to the gig economy that has run amok in the US for income. She is stuck with a group of friends who look down on her and string her along to make them feel superior. Her roommate Gretchen (singer and YouTuber Alice Lee in a thankless role) is one of those conventionally pretty young woman who wants to become a social media star, who keeps Brittany around to pad her own insecurities. She is the fat girl of the group, and as a defense mechanism, she develops a great sense of humour (a high speed wit that definitely stands out among the various funny-as-a-defence-mechanism characters I have seen in many movies). She has the fast, club, drug lifestyle; everything a 30-something New York girl can be expected to be like.
The movie, after taking some time to develop her surroundings, starts delving into the story when she invariably has to go the doctor to score some prescription drugs. The doctor, very subtly and sincerely without judgement, advices her to drop 50 pounds in bodyweight. Alarmed at the health situation she's facing, she goes to the gym, and realizes it's too expensive for her (yet another 21st century problem which drives people away from fitness), and decides to take up running.
The scenes were she starts to run is one of the best scenes regarding mental health that I have seen in movies. She looks out at her footpath, and the surroundings, and is hesitant. Doubts run through her mind, and somehow, she wills herself to run one block. She does, and is completely winded. The next day, she runs another. Soon, she decides to make this an important habit in her life, and even joins Moneybags Martha (a delightful Michalea Watkins, a fellow SNL alumnus) in her running group. She makes another novice runner friend, Seth (a very good-looking Micah Stock). Meanwhile, as Brittany realizes Gretchen might not have her best interests at heart, she goes less and less out with her, and her relationship with Gretchen, slowly deteriorates.
Brittany lucks out with one of her pet sitting gigs, where she decides to stay when the owners are traveling around the world, and she also meets (Utkarsh Ambudkar), a fellow millennial who is stuck in a rut.
After finishing a 2 mile marathon and later a 5k run, Brittany is determined to finish in the prestigious New York Marathon, and throws herself into her new lifestyle. But progress is not always smooth and linear, like how most sports movies make it seem. She relapses into bad habits occasionally, is hard at herself for it, and punishes herself with grueling schedules. Along the way, the movie opens up her deeper emotional issues. Every time Brittany seems to be on the verge of making a genuine milestone, something happens which triggers the old insecurities. We go into the story of her parents' divorce and her love towards her late father, and how her brother-in-law took care of her. Her defense mechanism, which helped her during hard times with her father and later in school, have been holding back her progress, and slowly but steadily, she learns to let people who have good intentions towards her into her life. She opens up to Seth and Catherine, formerly known as Moneybags Martha, and decides to apply for jobs that she trained for. She decides to change her relationship with Jern into a healthy one, and makes boundaries with him.
The movie, written and directed by a man, based on the true story of his best friend, seems to be surprisingly realistic towards the experience of a woman who is physically and psychologically unhealthy on her journey towards healing her wounds. This is Brittany's story, and that means we get to see her at her best but also at her worst, many times, as she tries to drag herself out of her personal hellhole. The viewer is privy to not just her light speed wit and funny one-liners, but also acerbic and cruel comments, both borne out of her deeper psychological wounds. The subtleness and great care shown by the writer-director in depicting every aspect of a self-empowerment journey is what makes this movie stand out among such movies.
The cinematography on New York is well done, with minimal use of extravagant, beautiful shots that are a staple of rom-coms set in the city. The lighting is very appropriate to the scenes. The colors are bright whenever Brittany is in New York doing her thing, but goes darker when she goes into one of her dark phases, which I thought was a nice touch. A little care with editing, especially the inclusion of the epilogue would have made this a taut movie, but it seemed like the director decided to give Brittany her happy ending. He seemed to have been reminded by someone that too much realism could sometimes turn off people who came to watch a feel-good movie, apparently.
DIRECTION 7 SCREENPLAY 7 ACTING 7.5 CINEMATOGRAPHY 7
VERDICT: 7/10
I came into this movie with low expectations. It really surprised me. It was raw, genuine and inspirational. Jillian Bells commitment to the role is something to be celebrated.
I was enjoying the movie completely all the way through the twists and turns and mood swings and self-pity and longing and loneliness and frustrations and efforts to improve efforts to become a better person stumbling falling getting back up falling again having self-restraint self-control self-discipline sense of humor insight and courage to stand alone up until she insulted a big fat obese woman at her brother-in-law's birthday party. That little part showed a psychopath that completely ruined the whole movie for me. Because all of my empathy towards her went out the window. I can understand going after someone that you know but if you don't know them it makes you look like a complete psychopath. It went downhill from there so about 75% of the movie is great but the last 25% ruined for me.
Did you know
- TriviaThe cast and crew actually got to film at the New York City Marathon, making this the first time a non-documentary film crew has been allowed to shoot there.
- GoofsThe amount of wine in Brittany's glass at Demetrius's party constantly goes back to being close to full, despite her taking big gulps and not seen refilling the glass.
- Quotes
Owner of Dog-sitting Home: [to Brittany and Jern upon returning and looking around] Did you pieces of shit move into our house?
- How long is Brittany Runs a Marathon?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $7,189,808
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $180,711
- Aug 25, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $7,464,678
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
