Two months shy of their wedding, a couple decide to allow each other last flings until their wedding.Two months shy of their wedding, a couple decide to allow each other last flings until their wedding.Two months shy of their wedding, a couple decide to allow each other last flings until their wedding.
- Awards
- 2 wins
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOn episode 433 of Jay Mohr's podcast he admitted falling for Julianne Nicholson during shooting, but never acted on his crush sure that Julianna was only acting.
- GoofsWhen Ed is talking to Sandy and says, "I seem sad?" his words does not match his mouth.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Conan: Death Gets a Paper Cut (2011)
Featured review
Goofy portrayal of a couple trying to go the polyamorous route
Alice (Julianne Nicholson) and Ed (Jay Mohr) are in love, live together, and are going to be married. The timid Alice realizes that she hasn't really slept with many men and regrets that. She suggests to Ed that they have sex with other people before getting married. He doesn't want to, but she insists that if they are both completely honest, it could work. He reluctantly agrees.
This movie works for the first half. It is funny, clever, and well-acted. Unfortunately, making a movie about polyamory that has something interesting and unique to say is really difficult. This storyline becomes less and less serious halfway through. The comedy turns screwball and is pretty ridiculous. We also see glimpses of side-character relationships (including two dishonest cheating friends, as well as a single friend dating a single mom) that ostensibly serve to compare and contrast with the lead relationship, but none of these stories go anywhere far enough to accomplish this. This movie's saving grace is its solid B-list ensemble cast including Josh Charles, Lauren Graham, Helen Slater, Jill Ritchie, and Andy Richter. On a sidenote, I watched this movie because rock goddess Liz Phair is in it. She has one pointless scene and you can't even tell its her. Sigh!
This movie works for the first half. It is funny, clever, and well-acted. Unfortunately, making a movie about polyamory that has something interesting and unique to say is really difficult. This storyline becomes less and less serious halfway through. The comedy turns screwball and is pretty ridiculous. We also see glimpses of side-character relationships (including two dishonest cheating friends, as well as a single friend dating a single mom) that ostensibly serve to compare and contrast with the lead relationship, but none of these stories go anywhere far enough to accomplish this. This movie's saving grace is its solid B-list ensemble cast including Josh Charles, Lauren Graham, Helen Slater, Jill Ritchie, and Andy Richter. On a sidenote, I watched this movie because rock goddess Liz Phair is in it. She has one pointless scene and you can't even tell its her. Sigh!
helpful•42
- ThrownMuse
- Mar 17, 2005
- How long is Seeing Other People?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $87,923
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $38,182
- May 9, 2004
- Gross worldwide
- $87,923
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content