
Another Round
3.8
(731)
Comedy
Drama
2020
117 min
NR
Four high school teachers launch a drinking experiment: upholding a constant low level of intoxication.
Starring:
Comedy
Drama
AD
Also Available On:
Community ReviewsSee all
"I didn’t know this came out in 2020 until just making this. What a great movie. It started off very simple just 4 men bored of their lives so they decided to add something to it. It’s honestly just a good comedic movie. Just 4 teachers drinking to help make their days better. I really loved the 4 of them. They genuinely felt like good friends. They do end up going to far in the end and each ruin their lives a bit. I think that’s a good message to have in a movie you can have fun doing something but don’t go to far. Their also a lot of side things happenings throughout which I liked. Very good. Bittersweet ending unfortunately but that dance scene at the end was phenomenal. Loved it. Very just feel good movie. Even with the drama it feels like just the right amount to still really appreciate."
"I was just recommending this one for an ask and it reminded me of how much I enjoyed this movie,what an underrated masterpiece.brilliant performances,good directing and solid story but the scene that made me fall in love with it is the dance scene.oh my god!epic cinema,that is what I want to feel while I'm watching a movie.,that is what I want to see,breathtaking,beautiful,the true meaning of cinema, a great class to learn acting because mads mikkelsen in this scene is a shining star which you can not take your eyes off of,he deserved millions awards just for that moment.what a movie,what a performance,what a life!"
"This bittersweet film was especially poignant because I have quite a few people in my life who justify their drinking by invoking the legacies of history's great functional alcoholics like Hemingway and Churchill. Even if I hadn't cared for it, I would still have to give it a like for Mads Mikkelsen's drunk dancing at the end."
"There's so much to say about this movie. There's nothing simple about its subject matter, but it done in a very subtle, yet effective way. I love how, without taking a moralistic approach, it clearly forces us to reflect on the omnipresence of alcohol in our social interactions. In short, it was great. "