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      • Effortless and effervescent, “Frances Ha” is a small miracle of a movie, honest and funny with an aim that’s true. It’s both a timeless story of the joys and sorrows of youth and a dead-on portrait of how things are right now for one particular New York woman who, try as she might, can’t quite get her life together.
      www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/moviesnow/la-et-mn-frances-ha-20130517-story.html
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  2. Ultimately it’s tempting to file “Frances Ha” under “pretty good, but could be a lot better if it tried.” In that sense, it provides an unfortunate correlative for the continuing career trajectory of Baumbach, a perennial underachiever.

  3. Apr 9, 2020 · In Noah Baumbach’s simultaneously laidback, charming and astute 2012 black-and-white comedy-drama Frances Ha ( now streaming at SBS On Demand. ), it’s easy to lose count of the number of times that aspiring dancer Frances (Greta Gerwig) makes a self-deprecating remark.

    • Spaces
    • The Subject of Class
    • Frances, Sophie and The Subject of Love
    • Why Does Society Deem The Choices Made by Women Like Frances as unpalatable?

    The movie can in some sense be seen as ‘episodic’ owing to the efforts of the filmmakers in placing Frances at several locations (specifying the exact address against a dark screen each time) in the span of a single year. Yet, one cannot understand the exact trajectory that Frances undertakes unless they relate these episodes in order. At the very ...

    It is important to understand why the subject of class cannot be ignored in a film like ‘Frances Ha’. At several instances as mentioned above, Frances struggles to afford a living for herself and throughout the movie, she is seen to be seeking a financially secure life by means of practising her art. In this process, she is continually overwhelmed ...

    In the process of making sense of her existence, Frances constantly deflects from the conventional trail of pursuing love and pleasure and seeks for a feeling that might not necessarily be romantic or sexually driven but one that makes space for safety. Hence, she gives herself enough room to rely on other variants of love that might be deeply pers...

    The initial minutes of the movie enact the break-up between Frances and her boyfriend, Danwho complains that their relationship seems bleak and unpromising after she disagrees to move in with him. Refusing to respect or recognize Frances’s choices, likes and disagreements, Dan’s character reflects the fragility of male ego that is quite typical of ...

    • A study of female friendship. “Tell me the story of us…” When exploring the “What I Want” monologue through the lens of female friendship and how Sophie is that one person for Frances by the end of the film, Frances Ha succeeds in coming full circle.
    • The “What I Want” Monologue. “It’s that thing when you’re with someone, and you love them and they know it, and they love you and you know it… but it’s a party… and you’re both talking to other people, and you’re laughing and shining… and you look across the room and catch each other’s eyes… but – but not because you’re possessive, or it’s precisely sexual… but because… that is your person in this life.
    • Greta Gerwig’s charming and endearing performance as Frances. There is a real ease and naturalness to Greta Gerwig’s performance as Frances. The film is very much a character study and Gerwig is brilliant in the role as you believe this young woman’s struggles while she remains content to drift through life.
    • A spectacular soundtrack. When paired with the nostalgic black and white imagery of Frances Ha the score adds to the romantic mood captured on screen.
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Frances_HaFrances Ha - Wikipedia

    Frances Ha is a 2012 American black-and-white comedy-drama film directed by Noah Baumbach. It is written by Baumbach and Greta Gerwig, who also stars as Frances Halladay, a struggling 27-year-old dancer.

  5. Frances (Greta Gerwig) goes from apartment to apartment in Brooklyn as she looks for a job and a stable partner. Watch Frances Ha with a subscription on Netflix, rent on Fandango at Home, Prime...

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  6. Frances Ha: Directed by Noah Baumbach. With Greta Gerwig, Mickey Sumner, Michael Esper, Adam Driver. A New York woman apprentices for a dance company and throws herself headlong into her dreams, even as the possibility of realizing them dwindles.