Video Sources 0 Views

  • Watch traileryoutube.com
  • Source 1123movies
  • Source 2123movies
  • Source 3123movies
Liberal Arts 2012 123movies

Liberal Arts 2012 123movies

Sep. 14, 201297 Min.
Your rating: 0
5 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Liberal Arts 2012 123movies, Full Movie Online – Thirty-five-year-old Jesse Fisher, an admissions officer at a New York City post-secondary institution he who loves English and literature, has somewhat lost his passion in life, which includes recently being unceremoniously dumped by his latest girlfriend, who could no longer be the person to prop him up emotionally. He has a chance to find that passion again when he is invited to the retirement dinner of his second-favorite Ohio University college professor, Peter Hoberg, as his time there was when his life held the most passion. Jesse’s encounters with five people there may determine if he does find that passion again. They are: Hoberg, who is resisting the notion of retirement; Judith Fairfield, Jesse’s favorite professor, although for a different reason than his like of Hoberg; Nat, a free spirit who navigates life at the institution on his own terms; undergraduate student Dean, who Jesse sees as a younger more destructive version of himself; and nineteen-year-old undergraduate student Zibby, who is seemingly wise beyond her years and with who Jesse embarks on a relationship despite their sixteen-year-age difference..
Plot: Newly single, 35, and uninspired by his job, Jesse Fisher worries that his best days are behind him. But no matter how much he buries his head in a book, life keeps pulling Jesse back. When his favorite college professor invites him to campus to speak at his retirement dinner, Jesse jumps at the chance. He is prepared for the nostalgia of the dining halls and dorm rooms, the parties and poetry seminars; what he doesn’t see coming is Zibby – a beautiful, precocious, classical-music-loving sophomore. Zibby awakens scary, exciting, long-dormant feelings of possibility and connection that Jesse thought he had buried forever.
Smart Tags: #age_difference #retirement #admissions_officer #ohio #new_york_city #college_student #liberal_arts_college #ecclesiastes_quotation #laundromat #laundry_theft #letter_writing #alma_mater #reference_to_richard_wagner #reference_to_wolfgang_amadeus_mozart #undergraduate #reference_to_twilight #reference_to_chaucer #knit_hat #william_blake_quotation #reference_to_william_wordsworth #reference_to_norman_mailer


Find Alternative – Liberal Arts 2012, Streaming Links:

123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day


Ratings:

6.7/10 Votes: 38,358
71% | RottenTomatoes
55/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 462 Popularity: 12.177 | TMDB

Reviews:

Great movie for college students and grads
*This review was previously submitted as an assignment in my film class, which is the reason for its formality and structure.*

“Liberal Arts,” written and directed by Josh Radnor, deals with the often-crushing reality of post-college life and the pedestal on which the seemingly idyllic college years are placed. Though the film often runs the risk of becoming an intellectually preachy vanity piece, its genuinely smart writing and relentlessly likable cast elevates it to an honest, enjoyable study of college and its aftermath.

Radnor stars as 35-year-old Jesse, a college recruiter with an unmarketable English/history degree who is nostalgic for his own days at a picturesque Ohio university. When an old professor (Richard Jenkins) invites him back to campus for his retirement dinner, Jesse finds himself drawn to smart, peppy student Zibby (Elizabeth Olsen), despite his discomfort at the age difference between them. While exploring their latent relationship at his alma mater, Jesse encounters his most influential former professor (Allison Janney), a clinically depressed student (John Magaro), and some realizations about his own aims in life.

Given the subject matter and setting, it’s expected that the characters will pride themselves on their intellect and sophistication, and this gives way to some contrived, artsy dialogue, such as a letter montage (never easy to pull off) between Jesse and Zibby in which they wax poetic about classical music, which sounds smart in writing but comes off as unconvincing and pretentious when spoken, accompanied heavy-handedly by poignant New York scenery. However, the witty, laugh-out-loud dialogue usually keeps the film and characters from feeling like they take themselves too seriously, making determinedly highbrow scenes like this clash uncomfortably with the generally self-aware tone.

Radnor writes his character into enough glamorous situations (all the significant female characters sleep with him or try to at some point) and makes him sound over-educated enough that the film could have easily felt like a shameless vanity piece, but he plays Jesse so affably that there’s not much room to mind. It’s quite believable that his character would attract even young girls, with his naturally youthful looks and self-deprecating charm. Olsen does well with an even more challenging character; Zibby comes dangerously close to the “manic pixie dream girl” archetype of indies, but Olsen plays her with a sweet innocence that never feels fake and, when called on for dramatic moments, she is every bit a real college girl – wounded, vulnerable, and ultimately clueless about where she’s going in life. Zac Efron flits in and out as a wisdom-dispensing stoner who may or may not be a figment of Jesse’s imagination, offering some of the best laughs in the film.

Arguably the best performances, though, are given by Jenkins and Magaro. Jenkins plays the professor every student wants; like the film itself, he doesn’t take himself too seriously but is utterly devoted to the school. He delivers some of the best acting in the film when he pleads for his job back mere days after retiring. Magaro is strangely touching as a college student perhaps closer to the norm than the Zibbies of the world: miserable in school, there solely to please his family, and constantly on the brink of a mental breakdown. In his limited screen time, he creates an oddly heart-winning character despite his sullen demeanor.

“Liberal Arts” is an enjoyable, cleverly written film that should strike a note with college students current and former. The witty writing and earnest cast make its few pretentious missteps easy to brush off affectionately.

Review By: Chocolate_Swan
Leaves you with twinkling eyes and a ear-to-ear smile
It is really hard to come by movies that actually make sense these days. This one did in every single line the characters spoke out. I’m glad I watched it right at this stage of my life instead of watching it 10 years ago. This might have left a different impression back then but now? Now it all made sense.
Review By: florapax

Other Information:

Original Title Liberal Arts
Release Date 2012-09-14
Release Year 2012

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 37 min (97 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 327345
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Comedy, Drama, Romance
Director Josh Radnor
Writer Josh Radnor
Actors Josh Radnor, Elizabeth Olsen, Zac Efron
Country United States
Awards 7 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera Red Epic
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format Redcode RAW
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Redcode RAW (5K) (source format)
Printed Film Format N/A

Liberal Arts 2012 123movies
Original title Liberal Arts
TMDb Rating 6.448 462 votes

Similar titles

Greetings from Fukushima 2016 123movies
Rebound 2005 123movies
The Fitzroy 2017 123movies
Sons of ‘Ndrangheta 2019 123movies
Rob Delaney: Live at the Bowery Ballroom 2012 123movies
Bad Boys 1983 123movies
Kazablan 1973 123movies
Aftermath 2021 123movies
Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna 2006 123movies
Made in France 2015 123movies
Wonderwall 1968 123movies
The Off Hours 2011 123movies
Openloading.com: 123movies