58 votes and 29 Reviews

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Rotten Tomatoes® Score 77%

78%

In Theaters: October 10, 2014 (limited)

          October 17, 2014 (limited)

        


          October 24, 2014

PG-13 | 1h 43m | Comedy

  Watch Trailer

Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher), 12, whose parents just got divorced, moves with his mother (Melissa McCarthy) next door to Vincent (Bill Murray), a cantankerous, misanthropic war veteran whose gambling obsession keeps him perpetually in debt. When Oliver is bullied at school and loses his cell phone and house key, he knocks on Vincent’s door, asking to use the phone to call his mother. Thus begins a friendship between the two, as Vincent teaches the boy all about gambling, fighting, stealing, and other important guy stuff.

Director: Theodore Melfi

Studio: Weinstein Company

Cast: Bill Murray, Melissa McCarthy, Chris O’Dowd, Naomi Watts, Terrence Howard, Jaeden Martell

Writer(s): Theodore Melfi

58 votes and 29 Reviews

| Write a Review

Rotten Tomatoes® Score 77%

78%

In Theaters: October 10, 2014 (limited)

          October 17, 2014 (limited)

        


          October 24, 2014

PG-13 | 1h 43m | Comedy

  Watch Trailer

Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher), 12, whose parents just got divorced, moves with his mother (Melissa McCarthy) next door to Vincent (Bill Murray), a cantankerous, misanthropic war veteran whose gambling obsession keeps him perpetually in debt. When Oliver is bullied at school and loses his cell phone and house key, he knocks on Vincent’s door, asking to use the phone to call his mother. Thus begins a friendship between the two, as Vincent teaches the boy all about gambling, fighting, stealing, and other important guy stuff.

Rotten Tomatoes® Score 77%

78%

In Theaters: October 10, 2014 (limited)

          October 17, 2014 (limited)

        



          October 24, 2014

PG-13 | 1h 43m | Comedy

Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher), 12, whose parents just got divorced, moves with his mother (Melissa McCarthy) next door to Vincent (Bill Murray), a cantankerous, misanthropic war veteran whose gambling obsession keeps him perpetually in debt.

When Oliver is bullied at school and loses his cell phone and house key, he knocks on Vincent’s door, asking to use the phone to call his mother. Thus begins a friendship between the two, as Vincent teaches the boy all about gambling, fighting, stealing, and other important guy stuff.