A troubled couple vacate to a beautiful getaway, but bizarre circumstances further complicate their situation.A troubled couple vacate to a beautiful getaway, but bizarre circumstances further complicate their situation.A troubled couple vacate to a beautiful getaway, but bizarre circumstances further complicate their situation.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 2 nominations total
Brett Bietz
- Doug
- (voice)
Sean O'Malley
- Dave
- (voice)
Mary Steenburgen
- Mom
- (voice)
Drew Langer
- Brett
- (voice)
Jennifer Spriggs
- Ellen
- (voice)
Charlie McDowell
- Madison
- (voice)
Jeremy Mackie
- Other Male
- (voice)
Liz Lash
- Other Female
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
‘Snow White’ Stars Test Their Wits
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAbout the script and the way it was performed, Duplass stated, "The way this worked, there (was) about a 50-page document that was the entire movie - the scene beats, everything, locations - except for the actual dialogue in the film. And most of the dialogue you see in the film is improvised. Although in certain scenes, where we have effects and things like that, Justin our writer [Justin Lader] would write out a version of that scene the night before, to give us a good guide, so we could have something to stick to."
- GoofsSophie takes a bottle of wine with her left hand, and the next shot shows her taking it with her right hand.
- ConnectionsEdited into Couples Therapy (2014)
- SoundtracksBye Bye Baby
Written and performed by Little Hat Jones
Courtesy of Document Records Ltd and Hull Music Company
Featured review
It's hard to relay the joy I felt watching The One I Love, Charlie McDowell's first full-length feature. It's the kind of film you'll remember for a long time because it breaks so many boundaries. It's the kind of film Spike Jonze might come up with, minus some of the academic pretensions he sometimes clings to.
The trailer for The One I Love is almost perfect. It doesn't spoil the premise of the film, and neither will I.
Mark Duplass (who also produced along with his bro, of course) and Elizabeth Moss are excellently cast as Ethan and Sophie, two not-so-newlyweds who are encountering all too typical problems "relating."
At the suggestion of their therapist (Ted Danson, in a just-right cameo) they spend a weekend at a rather large rental house, unsuspecting of the lengths their counselor is willing to go to in order to motivate them to "connect."
The One I Love is a high-wire act by anyone's standards. The script is especially brilliant, but it doesn't spit its brilliance in your face constantly and then ask for your approval with laughter or the occasional tear. Instead, it dabbles in elements of Sci-Fi and Fantasy but doesn't let the main characters (or the audience) off easily by subjugating the human story to questions of logistics. In other words, this isn't a movie for the compulsively left-brained and anal. The performances and plot are engaging enough to make you accept this often absurd but always engaging film for what it is.
It takes guts to break the rules, even more talent to make it work. With The One I Love, Charlie McDowell seems destined to reprove the adage that talent runs in the family.
The trailer for The One I Love is almost perfect. It doesn't spoil the premise of the film, and neither will I.
Mark Duplass (who also produced along with his bro, of course) and Elizabeth Moss are excellently cast as Ethan and Sophie, two not-so-newlyweds who are encountering all too typical problems "relating."
At the suggestion of their therapist (Ted Danson, in a just-right cameo) they spend a weekend at a rather large rental house, unsuspecting of the lengths their counselor is willing to go to in order to motivate them to "connect."
The One I Love is a high-wire act by anyone's standards. The script is especially brilliant, but it doesn't spit its brilliance in your face constantly and then ask for your approval with laughter or the occasional tear. Instead, it dabbles in elements of Sci-Fi and Fantasy but doesn't let the main characters (or the audience) off easily by subjugating the human story to questions of logistics. In other words, this isn't a movie for the compulsively left-brained and anal. The performances and plot are engaging enough to make you accept this often absurd but always engaging film for what it is.
It takes guts to break the rules, even more talent to make it work. With The One I Love, Charlie McDowell seems destined to reprove the adage that talent runs in the family.
- How long is The One I Love?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- El amor perfecto no existe
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $100,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $513,447
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $48,059
- Aug 24, 2014
- Gross worldwide
- $596,933
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content