Monday, April 8, 2013

Watch Let My People Go! Best Movies

A sweet and hilarious fusion of gay romantic comedy, Jewish family drama and French bedroom farce, Mikael Buch's Let My People Go! follows the travails and daydreams of the lovelorn Reuben (Nicolas Maury), a French-Jewish gay mailman living in fairytale Finland (where he got his MA in "Comparative Sauna Cultures") with his gorgeous Nordic boyfriend. But just before Passover, a series of mishaps and a lovers' quarrel exile the heartbroken Reuben back to Paris and his zany family-including Almodovar goddess Carmen Maura as his ditzy mom, and Truffaut regular Jean-François Stévenin as his lothario father. Scripted by director Mikael Buch and renowned arthouse auteur Christophe Honoré (Love Songs), Let My People Go! both celebrates and upends Jewish and gay stereotypes with wit, gusto and style to spare. -- (C) Zeitgeist
If You Like this movie you can streaming Let My People Go! movie without downloading HERE
Movie Title : Let My People Go!
Release Date : Jan 11, 2013 Limited
Genre Movie :Comedy
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Actors :Nicolas Maury,Carmen Maura,Jean-François Stévenin,Amira Casar,Clement Sibony,Jarkko Niemi,Jean-Luc Bideau,Kari Väänänen,Outi Mäenpää


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Visitor Ranting & Critics For Let My People Go!

User Ranting Movie Let My People Go! : 2.6
User Count Like for Let My People Go! : 186
Critics Ranting For Let My People Go! : 4.7
Critics Percentage For Let My People Go! : 29 %

Trailer For Let My People Go!

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Review For Movie Let My People Go!
Oy vey doesn't begin to address the result.
Loren King-Boston Globe

The road to the inevitable slapsticky Seder is paved with more sweetness than bite, a good deal of frantic foolishness and progressively thinner laughs, all wrapped in a message of acceptance and inclusiveness.
Sheri Linden-Los Angeles Times

Among gay Jewish French postman movies, "Let My People Go!" may be a Hall of Fame entry, but alas, by any other standard this would-be sex comedy is a dismal failure.
Kyle Smith-New York Post

Reuben is a whiny and uncoordinated prodigal son. His constant chafing at himself and the world is the film's biggest problem; by the midway point we're all wishing him back in Finland where he belongs.
Jeannette Catsoulis-New York Times

The result is late Woody Allen, when early might have done the trick.
Ella Taylor-NPR

Though under 90 minutes, the whole frantically zany affair seems to last at least eight days. It might help to have a bottle of Manischewitz handy.
Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News

Though the film alludes repeatedly to the story of Exodus, it remains bound to hysterical stereotypes and hyperbolic plotting.
Peter Keough-Boston Phoenix

May well be the world's first French-Jewish-Finnish-Gay movie. Enjoyably campy.
Fr. Chris Carpenter-Movie Dearest

It will amuse and delight you because it never takes itself too seriously.
Avi Offer-NYC Movie Guru

Without a consistent stylistic playfulness to match the histrionic scenarios, the action often feels just plain silly.
Diego Costa-Slant Magazine

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Movie Overview For Let My People Go!

Ruben (Nicolas Maury) is a French Jewish gay man (think Pee Wee Herman meets David Sedaris) living in a candy-colored world in Finland with his lover Teemu (Jarkko Niemi), where Ruben works as a postman. One fateful day three days before Passover, Ruben tries to deliver an envelope of euros to a widower, who refuses to accept it, and collapses on his lawn. Teemu and Ruben fight over what to do with the cash and Ruben heads to Paris to think, and to celebrate Passover with his mother (played by Carmen Maura). Back home, Teemu is trying to get to the bottom of things--or should we say the top?-- while Ruben discovers in Paris that a certain someone has missed Ruben more than he knew. Jean-Luc Bideau, Didier Flamand, and Jean-Christophe Bouvet appear; Bouvet as the Commissaire has to mediate a poignant love call from jail.

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