Directors Mark and Jay Duplass' films are an acquired taste. If you can get behind the slacker milieu with its unapologetic passivity, you might cozy up to the production's charms. Ultra low budget and championing an authenticity that favors natural performances and dialogue, the... read more
Jason Segel,
Ed Helms,
Judy Greer,
Susan Sarandon,
Rae Dawn Chong
... see more
On his way to the store to buy wood glue, Jeff looks for signs from the universe to determine his path. However, a series of comedic and unexpected events leads him to cross paths with his family in t... read more
DVD Release Date: June 19, 2012
Stats: 477 reviews
Your Rating
Flixster Reviews (477)
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May 9, 2012
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March 22, 2012
This lumpy, amiable shaggy dog story from the Duplass brothers is another earnest, warm-hearted comedy that marries their signature family dysfunction, mumblecore quirk to a larger, more mainstream setting. The Jeff (Jason Segel) in question is a 30-year-old slacker, who indeed l... read more
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March 19, 2012fb791220692Jeff, Who Lives at Home makes one big mistake at the very beginning - it opens with a sort of promise that the film will have existential depth. And the Duplass brothers surely meant for that to be the case. While both Helms and Segel excel in their performances, the script doesn... read more
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May 14, 2012
I really enjoyed this. I remembered seeing the trailer and honestly, this genre is usually right up my alley. A more indie dramedy with usually hilarious people showing more of a toned-down realistic turn of a performance. This is a great story about family, about feeling lost in... read more
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May 14, 2012
Obsessed with the M. Night Shyamalan movie "Signs", stoner Segel believes everything happens for a reason. When he receives a misdialed phone call from someone looking for "Kevin" he takes it as some kind of sign. While riding the bus he spots a young black guy with the name Kevi... read more
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April 1, 2012fb720603734I never really cottoned to the whole Mumblecore Mumbojumbo. So many indie films, because of budgetary constraints or perhaps sue to a lack of imagination, are about people talking in rooms. It felt a little redundant to assign a name on top of it. The Duplass Brothers, however... read more
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March 30, 2012
Far from being a bio-pic of this reviewer, Jeff, Who Lives at Home is rather a pointedly funny but stark Home-slice of a dark comedy with awkward moments both laughable and thought-provoking. Powered by 2 ace comedic performances, the simple well-worn set-up yields more mastercla... read more
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April 6, 2012fb1025970122The directing team of the Duplass brothers produced a rather interesting comedy a few years ago in "Cyrus" when pairing a perfectly cast Jonah Hill opposite a wildly hilarious and self-conscious John C. Reilly. What spoke to me most about the project though, was not that it cast ... read more
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March 31, 2012fb100001266995067This movie had all the makings of being 5 stars if it stayed simple. With the name Jeff, who lives at home I expected a fun simple comedy. At first it was but then they had to make it more complicated. (Spoilers ahead) I think the whole saving the dad and daughters scene could ha... read more
Critic Reviews
"Jeff, Who Lives at Home" is [the Duplass brothers'] best yet. Full Review
The funny, touching and vital Jeff, Who Lives at Home reaffirms your faith in Jay and Mark Duplass. Their films hit you where you live. Full Review
The lives of these sweet, confused, basically decent people wrap around one another in ways that are funny, far-fetched and touching. Full Review
Generates quite a few laughs on the way to a surprisingly satisfying climax. Full Review
It's the modest, mumblecore version of the seemingly perennial story of man-children in the promised land. Full Review
It's a brilliant sleight of hand: Nothing important seems to be happening, and yet stuff keeps happening, and the movie is always pushing forward. Full Review
Sarandon is worth leaving home for, even if Jeff won't. Full Review
You come to like Jeff and even to admire him. The aura of holy foolishness that hangs around him is not just bong exhaust: he turns out to be the hero of a disarmingly sincere spiritual fable. Full Review
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