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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Watch The Way, Way Back Movie Online Streaming Megavideo

Watch movie theater The Way, Way Back


THE WAY, WAY BACK is the funny and poignant coming of age story of 14-year-old Duncan's (Liam James) summer vacation with his mother, Pam (Toni Collette), her overbearing boyfriend, Trent (Steve Carell), and his daughter, Steph (Zoe Levin). Having a rough time fitting in, the introverted Duncan finds an unexpected friend in gregarious Owen (Sam Rockwell), manager of the Water Wizz water park. Through his funny, clandestine friendship with Owen, Duncan slowly opens up to and begins to finally find his place in the world - all during a summer he will never forget. (c) Fox Searchlight
You Can Watch Movie Online Streaming in HD from HERE
Release Date The Way, Way Back Jul 5, 2013 Limited
Genres The Way, Way Back
: Drama,Comedy

The

Story Line For The Way, Way Back

Total Vote User The Way, Way Back : Visitor
User Ranting The Way, Way Back : 4.1
User Percentage For The Way, Way Back : 93 %
User Count Like for The Way, Way Back : 8,368
All Critics Ranting For The Way, Way Back : 7.4
All Critics Count For The Way, Way Back : 61
All Critics Percentage For The Way, Way Back : 87 %

Actors For The Way, Way Back

Steve Carell,Toni Collette,Liam James,Sam Rockwell,Zoe Levin,Allison Janney,Maya Rudolph,Amanda Peet,Annasophia Robb,Rob Corddry,Robert Capron,Jim Rash,Nat Faxon,Andria Blackman,Ava Deluca-Verley,River Alexander

Genres The Way, Way Back : Drama,Comedy


Review For The Way, Way Back

You don't see too many movies about the importance of fathers, and they're rarely done this well.
Mick LaSalle-San Francisco Chronicle

The film is awash in safe choices, from indie-pop-accompanied montages to sitcom one-liners and black-and-white characters.
Liam Lacey-Globe and Mail

A coming-of-age drama that manages some genuinely surprising turns despite the formulaic road it travels.
Ann Hornaday-Washington Post

The comedy dial does occasionally creep past 11. But the over-the-top Janney is still often hilarious, and Rockwell is a string of firecrackers.
Stephen Whitty-Newark Star-Ledger

Te film is bursting with life-and blissful silliness ...
Joe Morgenstern-Wall Street Journal

Authenticity gives the movie its witty, heartwarming, hopeful, sentimental, searing and relatable edge. It is merciless in probing the tender spots of times like these, and tough-guy sweet in patching up the wounds.
Betsy Sharkey-Los Angeles Times

Faxon, Rash, and their exceptionally capable cast have managed, with a story that is specific enough to feel new but universal enough to hit home.
Nell Minow-Beliefnet

a perceptive, incisive film about people at different points in their lives struggling or drowning
Andrea Chase-Killer Movie Reviews

With a double dose of Rockwell - Norman and Sam - it's a picture-perfect portrait of what summer - and summer movies - ought to be.
Al Alexander-The Patriot Ledger

There is a lot going on in "The Way, Way Back" and these stories are intelligently told.
Robin Clifford-Reeling Reviews

You basically get to live vicariously through a kid who becomes Sam Rockwell's best pal, and I promise, that's all you've ever wanted, even if you don't know it yet.
Vincent Mancini-FilmDrunk

It has its charms, most notably in Rockwell's wise-cracking put-on artist, but it never goes for anything really deep as 2009's similarly themed "Adventureland" did, while taking a few missteps along the way.
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews

A sunny wonder that effortlessly out-classes such floundering box-office behemoths as The Lone Ranger and White House Down.
Kurt Loder-Reason Online

Warm, engaging, and thoroughly charming even though we can predict every turn in this old-fashioned coming of age story. Carell is terrific as an unlikable bully.
Caryn James-James on screenS

The Way, Way Back only really gets interesting when Carell enters the frame and introduces an unconventional villain into this entirely too-conventional coming-of-age scenario.
Ethan Alter-Television Without Pity

[Duncan is] a passive participant in his own story, and that does not make for an especially admirable protagonist.
Mark Dujsik-Mark Reviews Movies

As with The Descendants, Faxon and Rash ably balance the humorous and the heavy, tipping neither toward the silly nor the mawkish.
Cary Darling-Fort Worth Star-Telegram/DFW.com

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