Kleine Sünden unter Brüdern (1995)
39KKleine Sünden unter Brüdern: Directed by Edward Burns. With Shari Albert, Maxine Bahns, Catharine Bolz, Connie Britton. Three Irish Catholic brothers from Long Island struggle to deal with love, marriage, and infidelity.
“I wound up watching the movie by accident and it turned out to be an experience much like passing road kill: Itu0026#39;s so horrid you canu0026#39;t look away.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAnd because it was so awful, I thought it might be fun to read a few reviews of it (reading reviews of bad movies is somewhat cathartic; you watch something awful and then let someone else vent about your wasted time….). What I found here was somewhat unbelievable. Somebody actually thought it had some redeeming features. It doesnu0026#39;t.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis film did not just have a surfeit of uninteresting characters who spoke extraordinarily turgid dialogue (one character says to the other u0026quot;I donu0026#39;t think we should see ONE ANOTHER for awhile….u0026quot; Nobody, really nobody, ever says ONE ANOTHER except in church.) It was also woodenly acted, nonsensically directed and had a plot so boring I kept switching to Tony Robbins infomercials for excitement. Shoestring budget or not, thereu0026#39;s no excuse for inflicting this kind of movie on the paying public. Okay, I didnu0026#39;t actually pay to see it because it was on Bravo, but I paid my cable bill and that should count for something.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBottom line is that this movie isnu0026#39;t funny, isnu0026#39;t sad, isnu0026#39;t thought provoking and isnu0026#39;t interesting. It is annoying.”