50/50

2011

Action / Comedy / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: OTTO

Top cast

Seth Rogen Photo
Seth Rogen as Kyle
Anna Kendrick Photo
Anna Kendrick as Katherine
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
700.69 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S 4 / 15
1.84 GB
1920*1080
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
P/S 2 / 20

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by KnightsofNi118 / 10

Hilarious and touching at the same time

Mixing cancer and comedy doesn't seem like it should go so well, but 50/50 is a film that makes it work. Joseph Gordon-Levitt stars as Adam, a 27 year old easy going guy who unexpectedly gets diagnosed with cancer. The film details his struggle to beat the disease and all the hardships that come along with having to fight a disease as crippling as cancer at such a young age. Adam is surrounded by various other people in his life that all influence him in different ways. Seth Rogen plays his best friend, Kyle, who always tries to help Adam out, but doesn't always know how to go about it. Anna Kendrick plays Adam's therapist, Katherine, whose attempts to help Adam cope with the cancer work at times, but at other times she just can't find the right way to connect with the grieving youngster. Bryce Dallas Howard plays Adam's girlfriend and Anjelica Houston is one of the strongest characters, Adam's overprotective mother. The film is a compassionate tale of love and friendship while simultaneously being a raunchy pothead comedy. The overlap is strange, but it works incredibly well.

There are so many ways to do a comedy film about cancer wrong, but very few ways to do it right. 50/50 thankfully manages to find the sweetspot of this risky terrain and succeeds in being a charmingly touching film as well as a wildly hilarious one. The writer of the film, Will Reiser, based the film on his own experiences with fighting and beating cancer at a young age, and his passion and understanding of this story shine beautifully through the film and its characters which surely all resemble Reiser's own friends and family in some way. 50/50 doesn't lean too far to either side of the comedy versus drama spectrum and it always maintains a consistent level of heartwarming hilarity balanced with touching sincerity. The drama and comedy weave in and out of each other perfectly and seamlessly with neither genre feeling inappropriate or out of place. It is sincere filmmaking at its finest.

Moreover, 50/50 just does a great job with its balance of genres, but also with the overall story and the great characters within that story. We grow such passionate empathy for Joseph Gordon-Levitt in a way I never thought could be possible. The film draws us into his troubled world so well and we are rooting for him all the way, cheering on his every move and growing more and more attached to him with every passing moment. We also grow to love the supporting cast who, with the exception of one particular character but I won't spoil anything, support Adam through all his hard times. The characters are all so well written and they play their key roles in Adam's life perfectly. 50/50 is a movie structured to where every character serves a major purpose in furthering Adam's development as well as the development of the plot. And so as we watch the relationships between Adam and the people in his life grow and fade we develop a deeper understanding of his character, making 50/50 an incredibly human story.

It's always nice to be so surprised by a film's quality. I expected good things from 50/50 from the first time I saw a trailer, but the movie itself exceeded my expectations. It is what the dramady subgenre is all about. It is a film tailor made to be the subgenre's posterchild. I laughed, I lamented, and I was brought close to tears at how heartwarming and touching of a film 50/50 is.

Reviewed by MartinHafer8 / 10

Joseph Gordon-Levitt has really come into his own....

Considering that I am a guy who went through cancer treatment when I was 26, this film naturally hit close to home. On top of that, I could see a lot in the film that worked--stuff that really connect with what it's like to go through this hell (such as the horribly detached way the doctor broke the news to the guy about his illness). It sure helped that the writer, Will Reiser, had gone through this himself.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt did not even register in most folks' minds until recently. He was just THAT kid from "3rd Rock"--a rather inconsequential series at that. However, recently he's blown a lot of people away given his breakout performances in "Inception". He's shown here in "50/50" that he can do well now as a star. This is quite a jump from his TV days as a scrawny kid.

The film, as many people know, is about a guy who finds out he has cancer. The film is not the deepest thing--just one guy's experiences with the disease as well as the experiences of those around him. In some cases, people really come through for them and in others, folks show their inadequacy--just as in real life--and just like what happened when I was ill. I liked this and I also liked how the character was NOT noble--he was just a guy. Well worth seeing, that's for sure.

Now I do have a few minor reservations in this excellent film. First, while I liked Rogan quite a bit (such as his using his friend's cancer to help him score with women as well as the way he reacted to THE breakup),he is VERY crude. Funny, yes....but VERY crude. Parents might want to think about this Secondly, the psychotherapist character (Anna Kendrick) is possibly the worst therapist in movie history. She apparently has no boundaries, no training and is a sweet idiot. Hopefully folks WON'T think that any of her behaviors are acceptable!! And, I cannot imagine ANY college allowing anyone that dippy to go near patients!! I used to be a psychotherapist many years ago--and I actually trained young counselors to do therapy. Even the dumbest and most inept grad student I ever met was light-years better than this goof-ball! Enjoyable but 100% unrealistic and the character should have been rewritten a bit to at least make her a bit more believable.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle8 / 10

Funny cancer movie

Adam (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and Kyle (Seth Rogen) are best friends co-workers. One day Adam is told he has cancer. The news hit everybody in their own way. His girlfriend Rachael (Bryce Dallas Howard) tries desperately to be helpful. His mother (Anjelica Huston) is shocked. He has trouble accepting help from his super young therapist Dr McKay (Anna Kendrick). It might be Kyle who deals with it the best.

This is based on Will Reiser's cancer story when he worked with Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg on the 'Da Ali G Show'. Seth Rogen is really funny as the inappropriate friend and their funny cancer bromance. Anna Kendrick is super sweet and provided some great funny moments. Bryce Dallas Howard is oddly hilarious as the bad girlfriend.

This is a good happy cancer movie. So if you have cancer, I highly recommend it. If you don't have cancer, maybe get some before watching this.

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