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The Kids Are All Right

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
136K
YOUR RATING
Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Hutcherson, and Mia Wasikowska in The Kids Are All Right (2010)
Two children conceived by artificial insemination bring their birth father into their family life.
Play trailer2:29
21 Videos
88 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

Two children conceived by artificial insemination bring their biological father into their non-traditional family life.Two children conceived by artificial insemination bring their biological father into their non-traditional family life.Two children conceived by artificial insemination bring their biological father into their non-traditional family life.

  • Director
    • Lisa Cholodenko
  • Writers
    • Lisa Cholodenko
    • Stuart Blumberg
  • Stars
    • Annette Bening
    • Julianne Moore
    • Mark Ruffalo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    136K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lisa Cholodenko
    • Writers
      • Lisa Cholodenko
      • Stuart Blumberg
    • Stars
      • Annette Bening
      • Julianne Moore
      • Mark Ruffalo
    • 327User reviews
    • 243Critic reviews
    • 86Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 4 Oscars
      • 29 wins & 133 nominations total

    Videos21

    The Kids Are All Right
    Trailer 2:29
    The Kids Are All Right
    What Roles Has Mark Ruffalo Been Considered For?
    Clip 3:07
    What Roles Has Mark Ruffalo Been Considered For?
    What Roles Has Mark Ruffalo Been Considered For?
    Clip 3:07
    What Roles Has Mark Ruffalo Been Considered For?
    The Kids Are All Right
    Clip 0:45
    The Kids Are All Right
    The Kids Are All Right
    Clip 0:43
    The Kids Are All Right
    The Kids Are All Right
    Clip 1:12
    The Kids Are All Right
    The Kids Are All Right
    Clip 1:28
    The Kids Are All Right

    Photos88

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Annette Bening
    Annette Bening
    • Nic
    Julianne Moore
    Julianne Moore
    • Jules
    Mark Ruffalo
    Mark Ruffalo
    • Paul
    Mia Wasikowska
    Mia Wasikowska
    • Joni
    Josh Hutcherson
    Josh Hutcherson
    • Laser
    Yaya DaCosta
    Yaya DaCosta
    • Tanya
    • (as Yaya Dacosta)
    Kunal Sharma
    Kunal Sharma
    • Jai
    Eddie Hassell
    Eddie Hassell
    • Clay
    Zosia Mamet
    Zosia Mamet
    • Sasha
    Joaquín Garrido
    Joaquín Garrido
    • Luis
    Rebecca Lawrence Levy
    Rebecca Lawrence Levy
    • Brooke
    • (as Rebecca Lawrence)
    Lisa Eisner
    • Stella
    Eric Eisner
    Eric Eisner
    • Joel
    Sasha Spielberg
    Sasha Spielberg
    • Waify Girl
    James MacDonald
    James MacDonald
    • Clay's Dad
    • (as James Macdonald)
    Margo Victor
    • Bartender
    Stuart Blumberg
    Stuart Blumberg
    • Sous-chef
    • (uncredited)
    Diego Calderón
    Diego Calderón
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lisa Cholodenko
    • Writers
      • Lisa Cholodenko
      • Stuart Blumberg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews327

    7.0136K
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    Featured reviews

    Red_Identity

    Excellent script and performances....

    The Kids Are All Right is yet another dramedy about a dysfunctional family, but it is still an excellent film with a great script and performances.

    Annette Bening and Julianne Moore are excellent. Both are extremely versatile, and both flawed, but they play their characters with true respect for the script. Mark Ruffalo is also a nice addition, but If I had to choose the best, it would be Bening, simply because she has the most to play with. There is a great scene where she finally warms up to Ruffalo's character and starts her own rendition of one of her favorite songs in the dinner table. The best scene in the film, perfectly executed, and Bening certainly deserves an Oscar nomination for that scene alone. Mia Wasikowska also proves that she is a great talent to behold for the future. The ending is great, really touching and it rings especially with me because I am close to leaving for college next year as well.

    Overall, I regret not having seen this sooner, and it is definitely worth accolades for the script and performances.
    7Hellmant

    Making heroes out of the wrong characters!

    'THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT': Three and a Half Stars (Out of Five)

    This indie critical darling is one of the best reviewed movies of the year and up until the climax I thought it was a pretty impressive little film. It is a well acted and realistic character study though with the likes of Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Hutcherson and 'ALICE IN WONDERLAND's Mia Wasikowska. It's directed and co-written by Lisa Cholodenko and Stuart Blumberg (who also wrote 'KEEPING THE FAITH' and co-wrote 'THE GIRL NEXT DOOR', which I'm a big fan of both). The acting is all impressive, especially Ruffalo and Bening. Moore is good but she's been much better, maybe it's just the character she's playing here that doesn't give her as much to work with. The directing is adequate and fitting to the material and the screenplay is full of natural and believable characters and dialog. Even the ending, which I didn't like, seems believable it's just that it turns the film into a much less valuable learning lesson.

    The film tells the story of Joni (Wasikowska) and Laser (Hutcherson) a brother and sister conceived through artificial insemination by their unhappy mothers Nic (Bening) and Jules (Moore). Joni is Nic's biological daughter and Laser is Jule's biological son and they were both conceived from the same sperm donor Paul (Ruffalo). On her eighteenth birthday, when she's legally able to do so without the consent of her mother, Joni contacts her biological father and she and Laser meet him secretly. Later their mothers find out about this and before allowing them to see him again demand to meet him as well. Nic, the controlling working mother, is very upset by the sudden involvement of Paul in her children lives but Jules (who has mostly been a stay at home mom) warms to him after he hires her to design and construct his back yard. Paul is a free spirited, fun loving co-op farmer and restaurant owner. This clashes with Nic but the rest of the family enjoys spending time with him and he really learns to love them as well. Complications arise.

    I was really fascinated by all of the characters and learned to really like them, all except for maybe Nic who was just a little to controlling and self righteous (but believable). Paul to me was the most relate-able and likable character and the story and growth of all of the characters kind of revolve around him. Without giving away too much the movie ends in conflict and one of the characters is sort of used and abused and left with a lot of unfair judgment placed upon him. It is realistic and believable though it just seems like the movie is making heroes out of the wrong characters and villains out of others, that don't deserve it. This left me very much disappointed in the movie as a whole and that's why I can't overwhelmingly recommend it.

    Watch our review show 'MOVIE TALK' at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOOi1HDSXyA
    7dfranzen70

    Better than all right

    The Kids Are All Right is one of those sweetly sentimental comedies that manages to be funny as well. It's about a decidedly unorthodox family that's far from perfect – and what happens when a so-called interloper arrives on the scene. It's wonderfully acted, with affecting performances by Mark Ruffalo and Julianne Moore, and it's engaging entertainment, no small feat when the subject of touching charm arises.

    Nic (Annette Bening) and Jules (Moore) are a married lesbian couple in California with two kids, Laser (Josh Hutcherson) and Joni (Mia Washikowska). Two two kids – one for each mom – are the result of a sperm donor, and when Joni turns 18 she places a call to the sperm bank at her brother's behest. The two wind up meeting Paul (Ruffalo) and hit it off, but when the two moms meet him, they have strikingly different reactions to his arrival.

    There's excellent conflict afoot here. The kids resent their moms for being so defensive about their wanting to know about their own biological father; the moms resent the kids for looking into the matter themselves. X is the calm, mediating type; she's outwardly caring and splits her time between raising the two kids and starting new (doomed) businesses. By contrast, Nic is more inwardly insecure, and she compensates by controlling as much as possible of the lives of the other three. No wonder Paul's appearance causes Nic to get her back up.

    The movie isn't one of those where increasingly wacky situations occur. It's not a slammed-door comedy. People behave as if you'd expect them to behave, which is nice thing to see in a comedy (rather than exaggeration of gestures and speech, for example). Eventually, it isn't enough that Paul shows up in everyone's lives, disrupting what little harmony they have; something else happens as a result of his appearance that really behaves as the key conflict. And for once, when the culprits are confronted, there is no neatly tied response given by the rest of the family.

    Another pleasant aspect of the movie is that it never treats the relationship between Bening and Moore as if it were anything but the most commonplace thing on earth. It's not just that these two woman are married and in love, it's that they're also utterly human – they fight each other convincingly, they get their feelings hurt, and they reconcile with the kind of subtlety you rarely really see in movies these days. Each character, rather than being simply caricatures of what a straight person would assume a gay married couple would look like, has her own striking personality, and the two actresses perform quite well. I think Moore comes off a little better and that Bening's character sometimes seemed a little one dimensional – but this is more likely an oversight on the part of the writer, not the actress. Ironically, it was Bening who received an Oscar nomination for this movie, but I think Moore's work was superior here.

    Overall, the script neither flashy nor contrived; situations don't crop up just so we can have a laugh at someone's expense. Well done.

    The Kids Are All Right is a genuinely funny movie. It's not a gagfest, and it wasn't meant to be one. The characters are sincere but not always forthright; they all seem to make a bad decision or two in the movie. The cast was well selected (lest I forget, Ruffalo is aces as a laid-back buttinsky, if such a thing can exist), and it's a movie worth seeing.
    8willandthomas-picturehou

    Mothers

    It's unavoidable to compare. We're at the beginning of the world our grandchildren are going to take for granted. But now, we compare and realize that family is by choice or design a place, a state of mind, in which love does or must flourish. Beautifully told with a sensational performance by Annette Bening. Without preaching or candy coating the story we realize that the future has a chance. Two women, one sperm donor and two children. Why not? We see the results on the children's faces. Mia Wasikowska is the daughter. Smart, compassionate, mature beyond her years. Josh Hutcherson is the son and, although he is the least developed character, I loved him, with his lopsided smile and his healthy curiosity. Mark Ruffalo, wonderful, showing us, as the sperm donor, another face of a character he has a monopoly in, the lovable loser. He is terrific! Julianne Moore is still an actress I find very hard to surrender to. Her acting is so much upfront that it takes you out of the truth she's trying to convey. However I loved the film and I only hope Hillary Swank is not nominated next year so Annette Bening finally gets what she so richly deserves.
    7NJMoon

    All Right Is Alright

    The kids are better than all right, they're terrific. So are their lesbian moms, played with insight and skill by Annette Bening and Julianne Moore. Trouble is, the film that surrounds them turns out to be less than compelling stuff despite its topicality. The sperm donor responsible for the family at hand is played by Mark Ruffalo, and although a talented fellow, his character has enough foibles to keep him emotionally distant from the viewer. The story of his introduction to this modern family goes in a couple of directions, but all feel familiar and none satisfactory. Terrific premise, but unfulfilled promise.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mark Ruffalo filmed his role in only six days.
    • Goofs
      Laser tells Paul that Joni got the National Merit Scholarship for science; however, National Merit Scholarships are not awarded in any specific categories. Candidates are chosen because of high scores on the PSAT, which does not include a science section.
    • Quotes

      Laser: Why'd you donate sperm?

      Paul: It just seemed like a lot more fun than, uh, donating blood.

    • Connections
      Featured in Late Show with David Letterman: Julianne Moore/Mike Massimino/The New Pornographers (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Cousins
      Written by Ezra Koenig, Rostam Batmanglij, Chris Baio, and Chris Tomson

      Performed by Vampire Weekend

      Courtesy of XL Recordings Ltd

      By arrangement with The Beggars Group

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    FAQ21

    • How long is The Kids Are All Right?Powered by Alexa
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 30, 2010 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Los niños están bien
    • Filming locations
      • Occidental College - 1600 Campus Road, Eagle Rock, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Focus Features
      • Gilbert Films
      • Saint Aire Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $20,811,365
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $491,971
      • Jul 11, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $34,758,951
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Hutcherson, and Mia Wasikowska in The Kids Are All Right (2010)
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