It casually lays out the domestic space where the story’s events takes place with acutely detailed cultural specificity.
The Other Half’s emotional resonance is consistently stifled by excessively gloomy aesthetic and stylistic tics.
Harriet’s transformation isn’t significant enough to justify her complete redemption in the eyes of those around her.
Joel David Moore’s film is too often distracted by irrelevant emotional grandstanding.
Throughout the film’s three interconnected stories, Jim O’Hanlon favors the blunt, maudlin manipulations of Crash.
The film joylessly coopts the hoariest stylistic tics and narrative tropes from your run-of-the-mill 1990s thriller.