A young man having an existential crisis convinces a Canadian self-help guru to come to London and become his personal life coach.A young man having an existential crisis convinces a Canadian self-help guru to come to London and become his personal life coach.A young man having an existential crisis convinces a Canadian self-help guru to come to London and become his personal life coach.
- Awards
- 6 wins total
Callum Jean-Thomas
- Skateboard Boy
- (as Callum Needham)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
I attended the DC Independent Film Festival's screening of How To Be here in Washington, DC.
I loved it! I like quiet little movies like this. It's all dialogue-rich, and location sets, and natural composition. I thought the casting was perfect: the characters were organic and realistic, other than Dr. Ellington (the personal therapist) who was supposed to be a caricature rather than a true character in the film. This gave it a subtly surreal dynamic, which I thought was a nice touch.
The script was great, IMO. I generally like good character sketches, though, so I suppose I could see people who are not interested in the same being less than thrilled with it. But I like the themes that Art brings to the story. They are typical and simple themes, like love, direction, family, friends, work, sadness, happiness. The characters are wholly irreverent and hilariously unique. For a very small film, this script is nicely fleshed out.
The direction, production, and editing were great! I didn't catch any mistakes. They had a thorough cinematographer, too. I thought the lighting was pleasing, and the sound was mixed/edited nicely.
And yes. Rob Pattinson's performance is stellar. For being a self-proclaimed "untrained" actor, he's got such a wonderful and daring on-screen presence. Art is pathetic...so freakin' pathetic. And Pattinson embodies him with such precise depth. His comedic delivery, his physical timing, his vocal performance; I swear, it's all flawless. He really reaches inside himself to find that space where depression and anxiety live, and he dives into the process of putting himself back together again. You really root for the guy, pathetic as he is. As Pattinson's fame swells exponentially in the coming years, this one will become a sleeper testament to his acting chops--teeny bopper vampire love stories be damned.
I loved it! I like quiet little movies like this. It's all dialogue-rich, and location sets, and natural composition. I thought the casting was perfect: the characters were organic and realistic, other than Dr. Ellington (the personal therapist) who was supposed to be a caricature rather than a true character in the film. This gave it a subtly surreal dynamic, which I thought was a nice touch.
The script was great, IMO. I generally like good character sketches, though, so I suppose I could see people who are not interested in the same being less than thrilled with it. But I like the themes that Art brings to the story. They are typical and simple themes, like love, direction, family, friends, work, sadness, happiness. The characters are wholly irreverent and hilariously unique. For a very small film, this script is nicely fleshed out.
The direction, production, and editing were great! I didn't catch any mistakes. They had a thorough cinematographer, too. I thought the lighting was pleasing, and the sound was mixed/edited nicely.
And yes. Rob Pattinson's performance is stellar. For being a self-proclaimed "untrained" actor, he's got such a wonderful and daring on-screen presence. Art is pathetic...so freakin' pathetic. And Pattinson embodies him with such precise depth. His comedic delivery, his physical timing, his vocal performance; I swear, it's all flawless. He really reaches inside himself to find that space where depression and anxiety live, and he dives into the process of putting himself back together again. You really root for the guy, pathetic as he is. As Pattinson's fame swells exponentially in the coming years, this one will become a sleeper testament to his acting chops--teeny bopper vampire love stories be damned.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was released the same year as the vampire flick Twilight (2008) which Robert Pattinson (Art) starred as Edward Cullen.
- GoofsDuring the bar scene, the level of beer in Art's glass jumps around several times, from nearly full to nearly empty and back again.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Saturday Night Live: Michael Phelps/Lil' Wayne (2008)
- How long is How to Be?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Переходный возраст
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- £500,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $30,945
- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
- Color
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