Really good. I think Al is a very good actor . He’s awesome. LA sucks horrific place to live

Really good. I think Al is a very good actor . He’s awesome. LA sucks horrific place to live
LA has always seemed to me like a miserable place to live.
Four short films (without endings) in and around LA are interrupted by the surreal quest of a man (Writer/Director Al Warren) looking for his lost dog. I struggled mightily with the reality of the film in which someone has been shooting an incomplete feature film for five years with a full crew (THAT HE PAYS!!??), but once I got over that hurdle, I was delighted to watch one of the most hair-raising (and realistic) scenes of on-set boredom/directorial stress ever put to the screen.
Very funny! And incomplete by design.
One of the many movies that hits hard for me because I am a dog owner. Very funny and original, with strong Los Angeles atmosphere. A star is born, and his name is Nick Pinkerton.
This movie makes me feel incredibly lucky to be a filmmaker. So moving, hilarious, and alive. Al is GOATED Beyond, and I can’t wait to see what he and Bible do next. The laughing scene, the FaceTime with his father, the “don’t call cut” scene, and all of allan and nick Pinkerton’s convos (but especially the one at the end where nick talks about the strange alchemy on set that you cannot control, the chaos element that makes a film…
gummo but it’s about people that can afford a house in LA
A movie about an indie filmmaker with anxiety, an inflated ego, terrible social skills, and a relationship perpetually on the brink of collapse.
So, essentially, it's just about an indie filmmaker.
Short Cuts but it's about a lost dog and is half the runtime -- fully on board for anything Al Warren does
one time during a screening of wendy & lucy in college this white girl nobody liked started profusely sobbing and talking about how dogs are better than people. this was like that except i was crying
An oddball mix of interrelated shorts, or just an average day in the city of angels? Director, co-writer, and star Al Warren is a filmmaker on the edge in this metatextual comedy, which conveys a sincere wonder at the chaos of both life and cinema with its sunny cinematography and colorful cast.
Now streaming exclusively.
Al Warren adopts the affect of a genteel, southern Larry David in this After Hours-like tale of an "amateur" filmmaker named Alan looking for a lost dog in the sprawl of Los Angeles. As an amateur filmmaker named Alan with a dog of my own, I found it very relatable. Warren has a masterful control of tone and a great eye for interesting characters. The film, featuring appearances from film critic/sourpuss Nick Pinkerton and wunderkind director Kristoffer Borgli, among others,…