First Love

5.7
20221h 35m

A young man’s difficult entry into adulthood, who experiences the highs and lows of his first love, while dealing with the familial fallout spurred by the financial crisis of 2008.

Production

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Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: First Love | Official Clip (HD) | A Midsummer Night’s Dream

First Love | Official Clip (HD) | A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Cast

Photo of Sydney Park

Sydney Park

Ann Matienzo

Photo of Diane Kruger

Diane Kruger

Kay Albright

Photo of Jeffrey Donovan

Jeffrey Donovan

Greg Albright

Photo of Nikolai Tsankov

Nikolai Tsankov

Father Alex

Photo of Chris Galust

Chris Galust

Casey Albright

Photo of Nanrisa Lee

Nanrisa Lee

Senior Manager

Photo of Sharon Leal

Sharon Leal

Jeannine Matienzo

Photo of Aurelia Michael

Aurelia Michael

Headhunter

Photo of Diane Venora

Diane Venora

Aunt Irene

Photo of Vincent Ventresca

Vincent Ventresca

Mark Albright

Photo of Alan Feinstein

Alan Feinstein

Bill Sosoyan

Photo of Patti Tippo

Patti Tippo

Ellen Sosoyan

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

What in heaven's name is Diane Kruger doing in this? It's one of these cheesy angst-ridden stories that is really all about building upon eye-candy Hero Fiennes Tiffin's "After..." series of unremarkable youthful romances. This time he ("Jim") falls for school friend "Ann" (Sydney Park) but for reasons that I didn't quite spot, she dumps him (after they've shagged, so perhaps it's not just his acting that's not so hot?). Meantime, his mum "Kay" (Miss Kruger) and her on-screen husband "Greg" (Jeffrey Donovan) are struggling in the aftermath of the financial crisis - their marriage and their home are at risk after he loses his job. Can he find work and can the kids patch their relationship up? What do you think? It's bizarre this film - nothing happens. The emotional/sex scenes are as lacking in passion as possible - without them actually being in different rooms, and the soundtrack, which can frequently be a redeeming factor in films like this - is really just lacklustre. HFT needs to be careful. He has a certain boyish charm, but he is not strong on accents (though quite why one was required here at all is anyone's guess) and unless he starts on the route to more substantial parts, then he is wont to disappear without trace leaving a legacy of teenage mush behind him. This is poor, no other word for it - even if I am not the demographic!

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