Lymelife Review

Lymelife
Long Island in the late '70s. Two families live through the vagaries, and tragedies, of suburban life.

by Angie Errigo |
Published on
Release Date:

04 Jul 2010

Running Time:

94 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

Lymelife

This at times darkly comic, ’70s-set dysfunctional family drama is the baby of Martini brothers Derick (co-wrote, directed) and Steven (co-wrote, produced), whose childhoods in the ’burbs informed the coming-of-ageing. It’s a tale of aspiration, property development, infidelity, innocence lost, bullying, betrayal and despair, as perceived by Rory Culkin’s teen, who has to move the Star Wars toys off his bed when the girl next door seduces him. It’s very like The Ice Storm — but not as good — although Martini does well enough on a small budget to have bagged the Toronto fest critics’ Discovery award. What makes it is the outstanding ensemble, notably Alec Baldwin and Timothy Hutton.

Boasting an outstanding ensemble cast, this small-budget indie is an at-times poignant tale of family life.
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