Metacritic Film

Hannah Takes the Stairs

Starring Greta Gerwig, Kent Osborne, Andrew Bujalski, Ry Russo-Young, Mark Duplass, Todd Rohal, Tipper Newton, and Kris Williams

MPAA RATING: Not Rated

IFC Films
Drama
83 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters August 22, 2007

Hannah, a recent college graduate, spends a brutally hot Chicago summer falling in and out of love. As she struggles to find personal and professional fulfillment through various relationships with friends and coworkers, she risks leaving destruction in her wake. Working collaboratively with his cast, which features several prominent independent filmmakers, Joe Swanberg follows up his previous efforts, "Kissing on the Mouth" and "LOL", with this delicate look at friendship, ambition, and the pursuit of happiness. (IFC Films)

WRITTEN BY
Joe Swanberg, Greta Gerwig, Kent Osborne
Andrew Bujalski, Mark Duplass
Ry Russo-Young
Kevin Bewersdorf

DIRECTED BY
Joe Swanberg

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

63 / 100

Critic Reviews

80 Film Threat Don R. Lewis
What really elevates Hannah Takes the Stairs is the truly outstanding performance by Greta Gerwig.
78 Austin Chronicle Marrit Ingman
The film has no script; it goes from moment to moment unhurriedly.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Andy Spletzer
Though the dialogue feels improvised and honest, the movie is less honest in creating its world.
75 Chicago Tribune Sid Smith
Intimacy is graphically portrayed, down to recurring moments in a bathtub, including a memorable duet trumpet rendition of “The 1812 Overture.” Chop off a star if you’re not up for highly experimental cinema.
75 New York Post V.A. Musetto
How can a movie with such a charming cast (let's not forget Ry Russo-Young as Hannah's female roommate) and believable dialogue (seemingly taken from the actors' real lives) go wrong? It can't.
75 The Onion (A.V. Club) Noel Murray
Doesn't rise to the level of Bujalski's breakthrough feature "Mutual Appreciation," mainly because Swanberg doesn't have Bujalski's eye.
75 Boston Globe Ty Burr
Shot with intentionally banal anti-style - minimal soundtrack music, found sound, jitter-cam - the movie achieves a wisdom that's bigger than it seems.
70 LA Weekly Scott Foundas
Like most of the men in the film, we would happily follow her anywhere.
70 Los Angeles Times Carina Chocano
There's something to be said for cinema this perversely naturalistic.
67 Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
What defines the slacker-geek twentysomething men and women who wander through Joe Swanberg's too-hip-to-be-romantic comedy Hannah Takes the Stairsis that they treat their libidos as minor accessories -- only to stammer through every casual conversation as if they were on a first Internet date.
60 Salon.com Andrew O'Hehir
The film's intimacy never feels fake, it's sporadically and unpredictably funny (I didn't exactly enjoy the cacophonous trumpet duet of the "1812 Overture," but I won't soon forget it), and the nonprofessional cast is surprisingly good.
50 The New York Times Matt Zoller Seitz
Less notable for its story than for what the movie itself represents: an evolutionary entry in the so-called Do It Yourself (or D.I.Y.) independent film movement.
50 San Francisco Chronicle G. Allen Johnson
Though it has merit and is recommended for the curious and adventurous, Joe Swanberg's film wears out its welcome about halfway through its 83 minutes. I'd say it doesn't go anywhere, but that's the point of these movies.
38 TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
The loose, rambling conversations that substitute for action might be more interesting if any of the characters were capable of real introspection. But they're so shallow and distracted they can't even manage sustained navel-gazing, which makes their so-called relationships profoundly uninteresting.
30 Variety Joe Leydon
Has the unmistakable look and feel of a micro-budget indie produced for a small circle of friends, many of whom are listed in the credits.

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