Flora and Son

Flora and Son(2023)

R
09/21/2023 (US)Music, Comedy, Drama1h 37m
7.0

"Talent is relative."

Overview

Single mom Flora is at a loss about what to do with her rebellious teenage son, Max. Her efforts to keep him out of trouble lead to a beat-up acoustic guitar, a washed-up LA musician, and harmony for this frayed Dublin family.

John Carney

Director

John Carney

Writer

Where to Watch

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Media

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Trailer

'Flora and Son' | Scene at The Academy

'Flora and Son' | Scene at The Academy

Featurette

Creating “High Life” with John Carney and Gary Clark

Creating “High Life” with John Carney and Gary Clark

Behind the Scenes

Eve Hewson & Orén Kinlan — “High Life”

Eve Hewson & Orén Kinlan — “High Life”

Clip

Writing "Meet in the Middle" with John Carney and Gary Clark

Writing "Meet in the Middle" with John Carney and Gary Clark

Behind the Scenes

Eve Hewson & Joseph Gordon-Levitt — “Meet in the Middle”

Eve Hewson & Joseph Gordon-Levitt — “Meet in the Middle”

Clip

Dublin 07 Scene

Dublin 07 Scene

Clip

Social

B
A review by Brent Marchant
5.0

Written on September 30, 2023

The hype swirling around this romantic/creative saga about how the power of love and art can solve virtually any problem has indeed been palpable, but the finished product unfortunately fails to live up to its ambitious billing. Writer-director John Carney’s latest feature tells the story of Flora (Eve Hewson), a Dublin working class single mom with questionable values who’s struggling to raise her (allegedly) rebellious teenage son, Max (Orén Kinlan). But, in doing so, the picture tends to wander amidst an array of diverse story threads, all of which start out dubious but gradually mellow into a mass of schmaltzy harmony, a somewhat implausible scenario given the patently unlikable and irresponsible nature of its central characters. The means for accomplishing this transformation is Flora’s budding love of music, a newfound passion brought about in large part thanks to her online relationship with Jeff (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), a deadpan, middle-aged Los Angeles-based guitar instructor, a relationship with obvious (but not especially credible) romantic underpinnings. However, in telling this tale, the film gets bogged down by elements like Max’s frequent but unconvincing rebelliousness, Flora’s turbulent relationship with her ex-husband, Ian (Jack Reynor), and a series of long-winded, tedious, supposedly sensitive conversations between Flora and Jeff. To its credit, the film has its share of biting one-liners and a breakout performance by Hewson, but much of this production never really seems to know where it’s going and ends up relying on trite, formulaic plot tropes to wind things up. Regrettably, “Flora and Son” represents yet another example of a film that seriously could have benefitted from further revision and development before being committed to a final cut, an all-too-familiar problem with many of this year’s cinematic releases.