Overview
Charlie quits his job to move home to manage his hometown rock band. His supportive girlfriend shares his love for the band, until struggles within the band force them to make choices that will impact their lives forever.
This movie is such a mixed bag. The first hour of the movie is completely generic and often times annoying. The leads are meant to profess their love for the band over and over and over again as we wait for the conflict that (finally) comes in the back half of the movie. Worse, the music in this part of the movie is really pedestrian. If this band and that music showed up in a movie parodying bad movie music, it would be believable (sorry!). But then a new singer (Laura Shay) is found, and at least she has a fabulous voice (even if she looked like she was attacking the keyboard and not playing it). And then the pivot comes – Lynn Cohen is easily the best thing about this movie, and those were the best ten minutes of the movie. The twist with the band was alright, but then we had to sit through another crappy song (sorry!) before getting a good ending.
I liked the pivot and believe that there was a better movie in there. But that’s why the great movies makers (and bands) are who they are.
IHATEBadMovies.com reviews All in Time
Movie title: All in Time
Movie description: Charlie quits his job to move home to manage his hometown rock band. His supportive girlfriend shares his love for the band, until struggles within the band force them to make choices that will impact their lives forever.
Date published: 2025-04-19
Director(s): Christopher Fetchko, Marina Donahue
Actor(s): Sean Modica, Lynn Cohen, Jean-Luc Bilodeau, Vanessa Ray, Joshua Burrow, Jay Klaitz, Tom Wopat, Pritesh Shah, Fred Norris
Genre: Music, Comedy, Drama
My Review
This movie is such a mixed bag. The first hour of the movie is completely generic and often times annoying. The leads are meant to profess their love for the band over and over and over again as we wait for the conflict that (finally) comes in the back half of the movie. Worse, the music in this part of the movie is really pedestrian. If this band and that music showed up in a movie parodying bad movie music, it would be believable (sorry!). But then a new singer (Laura Shay) is found, and at least she has a fabulous voice (even if she looked like she was attacking the keyboard and not playing it). And then the pivot comes – Lynn Cohen is easily the best thing about this movie, and those were the best ten minutes of the movie. The twist with the band was alright, but then we had to sit through another crappy song (sorry!) before getting a good ending.
I liked the pivot and believe that there was a better movie in there. But that’s why the great movies makers (and bands) are who they are.
-
My Review - 6/10
6/10