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After We Fell

After We Fell

  • Status: Released
  • 01-09-2021
  • Runtime: 99 min
  • Score: 7.03
  • Vote count: 2658

Just as Tessa's life begins to become unglued, nothing is what she thought it would be. Not her friends nor her family. The only person that she should be able to rely on is Hardin, who is furious when he discovers the massive secret that she's been keeping. Before Tessa makes the biggest decision of her life, everything changes because of revelations about her family.

Josephine Langford

Tessa Young

Hero Fiennes Tiffin

Hardin Scott

Louise Lombard

Trish Daniels

Chance Perdomo

Landon Gibson

Rob Estes

Ken Scott

Arielle Kebbel

Kimberly "Kim" Vance

Stephen Moyer

Christian Vance

Mira Sorvino

Carol Young

Frances Turner

Karen Scott

Kiana Madeira

Nora

Carter Jenkins

Robert Freeman

Atanas Srebrev

Richard Young

Anton Kottas

Smith Vance

Emmanuel Todorov

Mike

Velizar Nikolaev Biney

Dr. West

Matthew Hall

Bartender

Angela Sari

Lillian

Simon Fick

Foreboding Guy

Samantha Fries

Young Tessa

Ana Ivanova

Emery

Clive-Leviev Sawyer

Minister

Brian Pitt

Richard Young (uncredited)

Wolfie Trausch

Additional Voices (voice)

Anita Kalathara

Additional Voices (voice)

Matt Nolan

Additional Voices (voice)

Marcella Lentz-Pope

Additional Voices (voice)

Jessica Pennington

Additional Voices (voice)

Stephen Apostolina

Additional Voices (voice)

Grant George

Additional Voices (voice)

CinemaSerf

I seem to recall seeing the previous episode of this trilogy in the cinema - a beneficiary of the lockdown dearth that propelled some serious dross onto the big screen. This, mercifully, never found a home there and so could be watched, half-heartedly, from the comfort of my own living room. The rather uninspiring, self-indulgent characterisations of "Tess" (Josephine Langford) and "Hardin" (Hero Fiennes Tiffin) continue to vacillate from loving to loathing each other for reasons that continued to escape me after the first two films. The narrative reminded me of a visualisation of letters one might have written to a lonely hearts column - each problem being acted out on screen by the pair, before the scenario resets (for good or ill) and off we go again. To be fair, they are both quite easy on the eye, but their frequent, creatively photographed, sex scenes accompanied by some mediocre AOR soundtrack quickly start to wear thin. Perhaps I am just too old for this, but I just found their on/off relationship, their secret keeping about things that couldn't matter a jot to anyone, let alone to those who purport to "love" one and other, really boring. The truly stilted dialogue and delivery (especially from HFT, complete with a his unique set of "letraset" tattoos) ) contrive to make this a real dirge of a watch. Watch out, there's another one coming too....

tmdb51616167

This is the point in the movie where everything goes haywire, veering off a cliff into confusion, leaving you wondering what you're even watching. Felt like a repetition without the depth of a storyline, filled with plot holes and rushed scenes that felt forced. If you're going to commit to a franchise, then commit wholeheartedly. Unfortunately, this installment falls short, making it the weakest link in the trilogy.