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Third Person
In the romantic atmosphere, the Novelist Liam Nesson write three love stories in three different cities, Rome, Paris and New York, so the writer struggles to define the love through these stories which each one of them explains the love in the beginning, middle and end of the relationship.
10 March 1984, New York City, New York, USA
19 April 1978, Palo Alto, California, USA
18 February 1977, Bra, Piedmont, Italy
8 December 1965, Birmingham, England, UK
21 July 1984, London, England, UK
3 January 1959, London, England, UK
8 December 1953, Athens, Georgia, USA
7 April 1923, Naples, Italy
9 April 1981, Haifa, Israel
10 August 1975, Rome, Lazio, Italy
13 November 1979, Andria, Puglia, Italy
7 June 1952, Ballymena, Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK
1 June 1961, Milan, Lombardy, Italy
27 June 1974, Florence, Tuscany, Italy
14 April 1973, Woodhaven, Queens, New York City, New York, USA
April 09, 2015
Third Person has a number of distinct themes at work, manifested through characters and plots that are a mixed bag of believable and baffling.
November 16, 2014
Third Person suffers from a script that fails to hook you in during its opening section and drags on without sufficient emotional connection for 137 minutes.
October 08, 2015
The question is if he realizes he more or less admitted to being a sociopath who remorselessly exploits the pain of those around him for the sake of drama.
November 19, 2014
When we reach our finale you can't help but feel somewhat detached and uninvolved in this title.
July 10, 2014
"Third Person" doesn't lack for ambition, and it's nice to see Neeson in the kind of role that he excelled at before he morphed into an action star. But the film may have some folks wishing they'd bought a ticket to "Transformers 4" instead.
August 26, 2015
A pretentious wreck of a movie that severely tests the patience.
July 11, 2014
"Third Person" is such a solipsistic, navel-gazing creation that it seems to have barely made it out of Haggis' mind and onto the screen.
July 07, 2014
Trust is essential to any love relationship, writer-director Paul Haggis wants us to know, though he trusts us so little to grasp this theme ourselves that he makes his alter ego here, a world-weary novelist played by Liam Neeson, spell it out.
July 07, 2014
Plumbing emotional depths, Haggis turns the characters' tribulations onto the viewer: If white is the color of trust -- as Neeson's author writes -- aren't we all a little gray?
July 10, 2014
It's all, I'm sorry to say, a melodramatic slog.
July 10, 2014
Even if the story begins to melt into itself, at the end it's still fascinating to watch Haggis move his players.

