Screened as part of NZIFF 2014

The Skeleton Twins 2014

Directed by Craig Johnson

Saturday Night Live veterans Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig are brilliant as long-estranged twins who reunite in a crisis in this warm, often outrageously funny dramedy of late-30-something angst. Also starring Luke Wilson.

USA In English
88 minutes CinemaScope / DCP

Director

Producer

Stephanie Langhoff
,
Jennifer Lee
,
Jacob Pechenik

Screenplay

Craig Johnson
,
Mark Heyman

Photography

Reed Morano

Editor

Jennifer Lee

Production designer

Ola Maslik

Costume designer

Kaela Wohl

Music

Nathan Larson

With

Bill Hader (Milo Dean)
,
Kristen Wiig (Maggie Dean)
,
Luke Wilson (Lance)
,
Ty Burrell (Rich)
,
Boyd Holbrook (Billy)
,
Joanna Gleason (Judy)
,
Kathleen Rose Perkins (Carlie)
,
Adriane Lenox (Dr Linda Essex)

Festivals

Sundance
,
San Francisco
,
Sydney 2014

Elsewhere

A morbid undertow only sharpens the dead-on comic skills of a brilliant cast in this tale of suicidal 30-something twins coming to each other’s rescue – sort of. Bill Hader is Milo, a gay wannabe actor at the end of his rope in Los Angeles. Kristen Wiig is a dental technician in small-town NY State, married to the world’s most upbeat, understanding guy (Luke Wilson).

“If you’re going to juggle despair and humor in a story about two emotionally unstable, occasionally suicidal adult siblings who keep tripping up on the disappointments of their lives, it’s tricky to find a tone that’s neither too whiny nor too glib. But Craig Johnson’s delightful The Skeleton Twins gets it right. Warm, funny, heartfelt and even uplifting, the film is led by revelatory performances from Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig, both of them exploring rewarding new dramatic range without neglecting their mad comedic skills…

As the twins renew their closeness, they also regain intuitive insight into one another’s pain and sense of failure. That makes it harder for them to avoid openness, even if friction continues to surface as we learn the cause of their estrangement. Johnson and Heyman’s script is smart enough not to trim away all the untidy edges of their damaged lives, but it points them in the right direction in a genuinely satisfying final act… The central characters may be largely defined by their melancholia and their messed-up histories, but the film is a crowd-pleasing balm. ” — David Rooney, Hollywood Reporter