Drinking Buddies

2013

Action / Comedy / Drama / Romance

35
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 84% · 122 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 49% · 10K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.1/10 10 60852 60.9K

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Plot summary

Weekend trips, office parties, late night conversations, drinking on the job, marriage pressure, biological clocks, holding eye contact a second too long… you know what makes the line between “friends” and “more than friends” really blurry? Beer.


Uploaded by: OTTO
November 20, 2013 at 09:09 AM

Director

Top cast

Olivia Wilde as Kate
Jason Sudeikis as Gene Dentler
Jake Johnson as Luke
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
700.73 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
Seeds 1
1.24 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
Seeds 10

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by evanston_dad 4 / 10

People Drinking Beer Doesn't Make for Gripping Entertainment

It's official: watching a bunch of twenty-somethings figure out who they want to date is boring.

"Drinking Buddies" is about two couples who kind of wish each of them were free to hook up with the opposite-gendered member of the OTHER couple but who don't do anything about it. There are many scenes of some combination of these four people drinking copious amounts of beer and talking about nothing that's at all significant. This might recreate the actual experience of going out to bars and staying there long after all of the exciting people have gone home, but it makes for tedious and unengaging dramatic material. I would be tempted to shrug the film off as a total loss, but the final few scenes finally deliver something interesting in the way of writing and acting, so the film's not a complete wash.

Olivia Wilde is the main protagonist, and she's basically a male fantasy come true -- in other words, a dude who just happens to have a vagina. Anna Kendrick is the boring girl who wants her boyfriend to propose to her, and she looks just about as bored to be in the movie as we are by her character.

The film was of particular interest to me because it takes place in Chicago (where I live), but it could have been filmed in any city that has nondescript apartments.

Though I'm not THAT much older (38) than these characters are supposed to be, I felt watching this movie like I might as well have been born in the 1950s. You know you're a parent when you want to tell all the characters to drink some water and eat a vegetable.

Grade: C

Reviewed by Movie_Muse_Reviews 6 / 10

An observation of relationships through a beer glass

When the credits roll, Joe Swanberg's "Drinking Buddies" will at least leave you thirsty. Whether you'll be drinking to toast or drinking to forget is another matter.

Regardless in which camp you fall, "Drinking Buddies" is best enjoyed with your favorite craft beer in hand (or several). The story follows Kate (Olivia Wilde) and Luke (Jake Johnson), who both work for a new Chicago craft brewery, and their complicated relationship with their significant others and each other.

There isn't much to the story: if you're a beer nerd from the Midwest like I am, you might have more fun playing "spot the beer" than keeping an eye on what will happen next. The dramatic tension in this comedy comes from a weekend that Kate and her boyfriend, Chris (Ron Livingston),spend in Michigan with Luke and his girlfriend, Jill (Anna Kendrick). The sexual tension between the male and female counterparts is quite palpable and it drives (slowly) the entire rest of the film.

Fans of conventional Hollywood storytelling will likely cite "Drinking Buddies" as why independent films are awful, whereas fans of independent films will commend everything Swanberg does in this movie. It's a natural, true-to-life portrayal of relationships, where the characters live in a fishbowl and we observe them, counting the similarities to our own lives. There is practically no manufactured conflict, just people drinking, talking and trying to make sense of their lives.

Swanberg's script sets up situations in which a major conflict between the characters could break out at any second, but the film relies chiefly on its on-screen talent in order to work. Wilde and Johnson have excellent chemistry, to the point where it's almost painful that the story mostly deprives us of that romantic satisfaction. Wilde in particular hasn't given us a performance this raw since she made it big in Hollywood, so to see her give us the full range of the fun-loving but deeply insecure Kate is perhaps the finest takeaway "Drinking Buddies" has to offer. Johnson, on the other hand, while an ideal fit in his role, is mostly operating in familiar territory for anyone who follows him on Fox's comedy "New Girl."

Kendrick and Livingston, though technically important to the story, feel secondary to what may or may not happen between Kate and Luke. The depth of character is just not there for Livingston's Chris, or really for Kendrick's Jill either, though Kendrick (as always) makes the most with what she's given.

"Drinking Buddies" completely and honestly captures the indefinable nature of contemporary relationships, it just doesn't say anything new about it. You don't need to watch Swanberg's film to see a prime example of the oft-blurred line between Platonic and non-Platonic in a relationship, even if this movie does it particularly well. Similarly, the role that craft beer and beer culture plays in the film feels minimal if not irrelevant. The one idea that can be gleaned is that alcohol accentuates the complication of feelings by releasing impulses that otherwise can be repressed, but that's not exactly visible upon watching.

Expert talents and a filmmaker who truly understands relationship dynamics help elevate "Drinking Buddies" above the level of less astute indies that bank more on situational comedy and drama to bolster their themes. Yet the consequence is it hurts the entertainment value to a great degree. "Drinking Buddies" isn't boring, but it's underwhelming despite its strengths.

~Steven C Thanks for reading! Check out moviemusereviews.com for more

Reviewed by claudio_carvalho 6 / 10

Beers and Friendship

In Chicago, Kate (Olivia Wilde) is the PR of a brewery. Her boyfriend is Chris (Ron Livingston) and her best friend is her coworker Luke (Jake Johnson), who lives with his girlfriend Jill (Anna Kendrick). When Chris invites Luke and Jill to spend the weekend at his house by the lake, he gets closer to Jill while Kate spends most of the time with Luke. When they return to the city, Chris breaks up with Kate. She becomes upset and decides to celebrate with her coworkers in a bar; then she has one night stand with her colleague Dave (Ti West). When Luke learns what happened in the previous night, he becomes kind of jealous. Will their relationship be affected?

"Drinking Buddies" is a film about friendship and beers. The movie keeps a sexual tension between Kate and Luke that goes nowhere. Every viewer might have believed that the association of drinks and close relationship would go in a different direction, but it does not. But the chemistry between Olivia Wilde and Jake Johnson is impressive and beautiful to see. The scene when the gorgeous Olivia Wilde takes her clothes off is extremely sensual. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "Um Brinde À Amizade" ("A Toast to Friendship")

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