HD · HDR
Someone Great
Overlook Pick

Someone Great

64
User Score1,198 ratings
TMDB 6.416+20191h 32mEnglish
ComedyRomance

Synopsis

An aspiring music journalist lands her dream job and is about to move to San Francisco when her boyfriend of nine years decides to call it quits. To nurse her broken heart, she and her two best friends spend one outrageous last adventure in New York City.

Director
Jennifer Kaytin RobinsonFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Likely Story3 production companies
Release
April 19, 2019Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 19
Gina Rodriguez
Gina Rodriguez
Jenny Young
Brittany Snow
Brittany Snow
Blair
DeWanda Wise
DeWanda Wise
Erin Kennedy
Peter Vack
Peter Vack
Matt
RuPaul
RuPaul
Hype
LaKeith Stanfield
LaKeith Stanfield
Nate Davis
Alex Moffat
Alex Moffat
Will
Rebecca Naomi Jones
Rebecca Naomi Jones
Leah

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Peter McGinn
Mar 8, 2023

I have often said in reviews that I can be a bit of an easy grader with romantic comedies. Perhaps because I write my own novels featuring witty characters flirting with romance, a film mostly has to just have witty leads and not insult my intelligence with the plot to gain a favorable overall response from me. This movie clears that admittedly low- to mid-height bar. Of course it also is required that the romantic leads have a chemistry together. This story seems original to me in that regard, as the main relationship seemed centers around the platonic love the three women feel for each other. They talk about men and obsess about men, but I felt like as long as they had each other they would be fine. So I was relieved the script didn’t opt for the low hanging fruit of having two of the woman seriously competing for the same guy. In fact, there seemed to be an awkwardness between Nate and Jenny despite their being so much in love for so long. Given the subplot surrounding their affair, if that chemistry hitch was purposeful acting, it was brilliantly done. In fact, yeah, let’s give them the benefit of the doubt and say it was presented that way on purpose. The supporting cast was also good, especially Ru Paul coming close to a rush of scene-stealing brilliance. Was he just being himself? Whatever; it works. Jenny’s flashbacks approached having clumsy transitions at times, but once I was used to it I was fine with it. And the film seemed to rely on chiche one-night stands peppered here and there. It is this genre’s version of the explosion in action film or a chase scene in adventure tales. Perhaps it is expected by the more ravenous viewers. It just seems to lack imagination that could have been better utilized in other scenarios. But I found the movie entertaining and burdened by fewer cringeworthy moments than found in many rom-coms.

More Like This

Browse all