I Love You, Daddy
When a successful television writer's daughter becomes the interest of an aging filmmaker with an appalling past, he becomes worried about how to handle the situation.
15 June 1963, Culver City, California, USA
22 July 1947, Beverly Hills, California, USA
9 February 1976, New York City, New York, USA
9 July 1966, New York City, New York, USA
24 July 1979, Balmain, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
December 05, 2017
I Love You, Daddy is much in line with the awkward situational humor to be expected from Louis C.K. It doesn't necessarily have the answers to the questions it presents, but it certainly brings an interesting discussion to the table
November 20, 2017
The film is, undoubtedly, a great exercise by one of the last comedians who opines without censorship in the Trump era. [Full review in Spanish]
November 10, 2017
Queasy fare, not just because its rambling, self-indulgent story has strange and unfortunate associations with real-life allegations, but also for its tone-deaf narrative and offensive sexual politics.
November 20, 2017
Thematically tone deaf, stylistically inert and largely boring, I Love You, Daddy would be an awful film regardless of the news currently surrounding the writer/director.
September 15, 2017
This movie is the act of someone who thinks he's getting ahead of the story, who believes he can make something that almost smacks of being an admission and still take a $5 million distribution deal with the Orchard
November 16, 2017
I Love You, Daddy is a technically impressive film ... And all rendered meaningless by the unmistakable stench of creepiness, narcissism and hypocrisy permeating the story.
September 15, 2017
[I Love you,] Daddy is a formally sloppy but conceptually audacious movie whose genuine laughs disguise the areas in which it fears to tread.
November 10, 2017
The movie version of a pervert in a raincoat flashing you, deftly enough that you aren't sure you saw what you saw.
November 30, 2017
It's only an empty reflection on the abuse of power, which is just as focused on CK's self-proclaimed stature as a great comedian as it is about his regret for how his actions make him feel.
November 16, 2017
Louis C.K. is wearing Woody Allen glasses in this movie...a not-too-subtle touch.
November 20, 2017
Louis C.K. doesn't approach his subject substantially; rather, he uses China's coming-of-age story as a wedge to endorse, with an obliviously unconditional smugness, the merits of relationships between older men and teen-age girls.
November 20, 2017
It's like seeing a canary in a coal mine, Exhibit A for what's twisted in Hollywood culture and, in that regard, may be worth examining.

