Sundowners
We live here a series of wonderful comedies where the story of a duet is a real experience of comedy and fun. That story began where Alex and Justin had the chance to photograph a wedding in Mexico. Both buddies decide to go into a new experience, taking advantage of the opportunity to escape their protected lives, which seem somewhat traditional. In the end, they seem to be cooperating with their boss as they seem lucky to have more exciting new events.
26 October 1970, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
3 February 1976, Allentown, Pennsylvania, USA
5 December 1982, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
August 24, 2017
Pavan Moondi mines hilarious comedy from this tale of doofuses in oddball situations.
August 24, 2017
Booze, near-sex experiences and minor disasters... a chill indie take on a genre that's usually so desperate to make us laugh, it hyperventilates.
February 14, 2018
Written and directed by Pavan Moondi, this is, unfortunately, an unfocused mess of a story, albeit one with two tremendous leads, beautiful cinematography, and some genuinely laugh out loud moments. And if you're a fan of Tim Heidecker, he kills it.
December 14, 2017
Closure may be missing, but at least glimpses of promising Canadian performers are in abundant supply.
January 29, 2019
This is a messy attempt to invoke The Hangover and fuse it with Wedding Crashers.
August 25, 2017
Deliberately awkward and bravely subversive.
December 18, 2017
Exuding such a relaxed feel that it's not surprising that its title doesn't appear onscreen until nearly the half-hour mark, Sundowners never strains too hard for its considerable laughs.
December 04, 2017
Scruffy Canadian comedy whose laughs land more often than they miss.
December 15, 2017
It's for folks who fetishize indie-style ineptitude and amateurishness.
August 24, 2017
Moondi and his actors let Alex and Justin sketch their own stories, which are written in their faces and in the bad choices they habitually make.
December 19, 2017
The duo come across as abrasive and mirthless; for all their back-and-forths, they fail to land a single laugh-out-loud one-liner or comeback.

