Rotten Tomatoes

Movies / TV

    Celebrity

      No Results Found

      View All
      Movies Tv shows Shop News Showtimes

      Running From Crazy

      2012 1h 45m Drama Biography List
      60% Tomatometer 20 Reviews 45% Audience Score 100+ Ratings Model and actress Mariel Hemingway, the granddaughter of author Ernest Hemingway, pursues a better understanding of her family history of suicide and mental illness. Read More Read Less

      Critics Reviews

      View All (20) Critics Reviews
      Bruce DeMara Toronto Star While the film feels a little self-indulgent at times, Hemingway proves to be a worthy protagonist. Rated: 3/4 May 23, 2018 Full Review Moira MacDonald Seattle Times "People can heal themselves by feeling genuine love for each other," says Mariel's daughter, arms around her mother. It may not be the entire answer, but it's a start. Rated: 3/4 Nov 21, 2013 Full Review Mick LaSalle San Francisco Chronicle An artfully arranged account of Hemingway's current life, mixed with footage shot by her late sister Margaux for a 1983 documentary about the family. Rated: 3/4 Nov 8, 2013 Full Review Nicholas Bell IONCINEMA.com Running From Crazy may not be the most hard hitting of Kopple's documentary endeavors, but she's brought an arresting subject to light from a family still entrenched in the evolving entertainment industry. Rated: 3/5 Nov 3, 2020 Full Review Bernard Boo Way Too Indie The trouble is, to move forward you've got to learn from the past, and the dark roots of the Hemmingways feel neglected in Running From Crazy. Rated: 5/10 Apr 10, 2019 Full Review Kenneth R. Morefield Christianity Today Kopple is one of my favorite directors because she believes in her audience's intelligence. Rated: 4/4 Apr 26, 2014 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (6) audience reviews
      Deb K A sad movie, despite the beautiful scenery. Besides the troubled family history, it was disheartening to see Mariel's boyfriend treat her so poorly.. She deserves better. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 03/07/24 Full Review Audience Member After watching this, I feel very worried for Mariel. Running is certainly appropriate for the title. She's admitted to eating disorders and her behavior now seems to be a desperately manic attempt to run from her fears. Her abusive childhood steeped in alcoholic dysfunction and her witnessing the sexual abuse of her sister at the hands of her father. Not sure you can lay the suicides at the feet of mental illness. Appears to be chronic addiction to me. Her current relationship appears to be anything but healthy. I found no hope at all in the piece. In fact, I thought she was doing well until seeing this film. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 02/01/23 Full Review Audience Member Early on in Barbara Kopple's latest documentary, Running From Crazy, actress Mariel Hemingway takes the podium to speak at an event promoting suicide prevention. She acknowledges that she's lost seven family members to suicide including, most famously, her grandfather Ernest. Before she gets to the seventh name, however, she pauses, and Kopple cuts away dramatically. We never return to that moment, but anyone with cursory knowledge of the Hemingway family knows the name Mariel was about to speak-Margaux Hemingway, her sister. A world-famous model (and an admittedly less famous actress), Margaux took her own life in 1996. This particular tragedy serves as the driving force of Running From Crazy's almost narrative approach to the Hemingway family legacy. Perhaps its because Margaux's suicide was the one that struck closest to home for the film's star, Mariel. Mariel will repeatedly tell you she and her sister weren't close-something, again, almost anyone with knowledge of the Hemingways already knows. But the youngest sister of the three (painter Joan or "Muffet" being the oldest) doesn't shy away from this. She doesn't shy away from almost anything, which makes Running From Crazy all the more compelling. Its attempts at demonstrating how Mariel is able to do exactly what the title says are limp, but the way it tells Margaux's story with sometimes heartbreaking commentary from Mariel is great. Kopple uses a lot of archival footage of Margaux to tell her story, and she starts right at the beginning. The three girls had a rough childhood-sexual abuse by their father is more than hinted at-and Margaux (then Margot) found herself attracted to the bright lights, big city lifestyle. In the 1970s, she signed the largest contract in modeling history to that date, and her raspy voice and bold attitude made her a superstar. When she turned toward acting, however, she was savaged by critics. To make matters worse, she nabbed baby sister a role in what was supposed to be her big break-Lipstick-and Mariel earned raves. Then, of course, came Manhattan and Mariel's Oscar nomination. Margaux did little of note after that. She married twice, divorced twice, had a number of drug problems, and died alone, tragically. I eluded to the film's structure as being almost like that of a narrative feature, and it's one of the things I most admired about Running From Crazy. When it isn't delving into the benefits of a new age lifestyle, it's telling a simple story about a family that falls apart over time. There are a lot of details about the Hemingways that make everyone's end fates seem appropriately melancholy. The aforementioned sexual abuse, the alcoholism, the rivalries, the suicides, the legacy-it's too much for most of these people. Even the survivors-Muffy for example-are struggling. The film's standout scene, arguably, takes place when Mariel visits her noticeably disturbed older sister. It's a brutal sequence because Muffy so plainly couldn't cope with the pain. Mariel, meanwhile, has found her happy place, but seeing her sister seems to open old wounds. If the film cut the fluff, it would be an undeniably great one. I wouldn't describe the final product that way, but I admired Hemingway's honesty quite a bit, nonetheless. Running From Crazy is a moving documentary with a beating heart, which makes it worthy of your time when it comes your way. http://www.johnlikesmovies.com/running-from-crazy-review/ Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member Aptly named documentary about how suicidal tendencies seem to run in the Hemingway family, this is potential help for those dealing with similar issues. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member Raw, honest and inspiring! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/17/23 Full Review Audience Member How can a documentatry about major depression be bad? Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      53% 36% Lovelace 7% 26% Diana 69% 54% The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks TRAILER for The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks 100% 94% Temple Grandin 58% 74% Concussion TRAILER for Concussion Discover more movies and TV shows. View More

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Model and actress Mariel Hemingway, the granddaughter of author Ernest Hemingway, pursues a better understanding of her family history of suicide and mental illness.
      Director
      Barbara Kopple
      Producer
      Barbara Kopple, David Cassidy
      Genre
      Drama, Biography
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Aug 10, 2016
      Runtime
      1h 45m