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From director Jason Reitman, Labor Day is a 'beautifully crafted' and 'captivating' romance starring Kate Winslet and Josh Brolin as two strangers drawn together under incredible circumstances. What starts as an unforeseen encounter over a long holiday weekend soon becomes a second chance love story in the unforgettable film that critics are calling 'uplifting and heartbreaking'. (Paramount Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (8)

Lima 

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English Not many films today can boast such precise, focused direction. Every look of the actors, every shot, has its place. This is a long way from the "red library", as some here write. Of course, some naysayers might find it there, especially in the final climax, but there's nothing to be done about that. Kate Winslet is fantastic Josh Brolin’s charisma is enormous. ()

Malarkey 

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English I didn’t read the description of this movie. I just noticed that my reliables at this site didn’t rate it lower than four stars and so I thought that there must be something to it. I put on HBO and waited what Labor Day would bring. And from the start, it seemed very depressing and classic when it comes to a prison escapee. But I didn’t expect that it’d become such a drama full of love with a beautiful story flow, amazing actors and an ending that probably couldn’t have been any more beautiful. It’s just a shame that here and there, I didn’t really get a few things. For example, whether Adele’s son was adopted or biological. Since Reitman made the effort to tell her sad life story, he could have given us some closure as well. And there was a lot of those moments. But overall, it was a beautiful movie about a fated love that was worth waiting for. ()

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Stanislaus 

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English Labor Day offers a believably written story of two people who thought they would never find love and happiness in their lives, but fate gave them a few days together that changed both of their lives from the ground up. The film stands above all on the performances of Kate Winslet and Josh Brolin, who were brilliantly seconded by the young Gattlin Griffith. Thanks to flashbacks, we slowly uncover the sad story of the two main characters and basically have no idea how things will turn out for them until the very end – a big plus for the unpredictability of the plot. Through the character of Henry, alongside the love storyline, the film offers a coming-of-age tale and seeing the world through a child's eyes, which is not as black and white as it might seem. Although the film has a slower pace at first, it doesn't get boring, and in the last third the atmosphere could almost be cut with a knife at times. ()

kaylin 

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English A quite interesting story, but in my opinion, it is a bit dampened by too peaceful acting. Emotions literally overflow from Kate, but Josh Brolin's character could have been even more ambivalent, even rougher. Like this, it's a rather intriguing romance, but it still drags on enough to completely draw a person in and hit them in the end. ()

Othello 

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English A whiny, drawn out, and incredibly uninspiring spectacle like something from the Sparks, where I had to spend the whole time thinking about my vacation starting the next day so I wouldn't eat my arm out of boredom. It embodies virtually every aspect of cinematic evil – guilt, fatalism, mistrust breaking into love, becoming a man, soft lights – and it's got practically zero budget. Better to read the book instead. A different one, that is. ()

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