Yellow Bird

Tagline : A story about searching for happiness

Runtime : 104 mins

Genre : Comedy

Vote Rating : 5/10


Reviews for this movie are available below.

Plot : A once successful P.R. Specialist deals with the trials and tribulations of managing a local grocery store known as "The Yellow Bird" while struggling with his loveless marriage, an unhappy stepdaughter and his own sobriety.

Cast Members

Disclaimer - This is a news site. All the information listed here is to be found on the web elsewhere. We do not host, upload or link to any video, films, media file, live streams etc. Kodiapps is not responsible for the accuracy, compliance, copyright, legality, decency, or any other aspect of the content streamed to/from your device. We are not connected to or in any other way affiliated with Kodi, Team Kodi, or the XBMC Foundation. We provide no support for third party add-ons installed on your devices, as they do not belong to us. It is your responsibility to ensure that you comply with all your regional legalities and personal access rights regarding any streams to be found on the web. If in doubt, do not use.
DMCA Policy
- Privacy Policy
Kodiapps app v7.0 - Available for Android. You can now add latest scene releases to your collection with Add to Trakt. More features and updates coming to this app real soon.
Tip : Add https://kodiapps.com/rss to your RSS Ticker in System/Appearance/Skin settings to get the very latest Movie & TV Show release info delivered direct to your Kodi Home Screen. Builders are free to use it for their builds too.
You can get all the very release news and updates direct from our Telegram group.
Our Twitter and Facebook pages are no longer supported.

Reviews

Director Angus Benfield Cast Angus Benfield (Inventing Anna), Brian Doyle-Murray (Caddyshack), Kathy Garver (Family Affair), Plastic Martyr (Battle for Pandora), Melissa Disney (Superman vs The Elite) "Synopsis: In the style of The Office and Schitt’s Creek comes a fun new comedy about searching for happiness, “Yellow Bird.” This heartfelt film, set in a small country-town grocery store named "The Yellow Bird," is centered around once successful PR specialist Jake (Angus Benfield), now a stock boy in his mid-forties, struggling with his sobriety, and his conscience in the guise of a gnome (Brian Doyle-Murray) who is determined to remind Jake of all his failings, including his marriage. Jake’s mother, Rachel Rush (Kathy Garver), is struggling with Alzheimer's and is living in an RV. Rachel is holding onto a past she remembers as much more adventurous and exciting than this life and is determined to find it once again, and Scotty, the protagonistic store manager who is stuck in a job his father wants him to be in, and so makes all the fun and quirky employees at “The Yellow Bird” miserable in return." Yellow Bird is among the recently selected catalog at this year's Los Angeles Film Festival - Independent Film Showcase. There are points where Yellow Bird begins to flow toward a direction but seemingly stumbles into the plot as it continuously fails to recognize itself; does it want to convey an overall positive message? It's clear that the goal was to convey a positive message but the attempt gets lost in translation, drowned out by the way body & age shaming is rampant throughout, with women being the primary target. The positive representation of women in the story sees them serve as props & plot devices, they essentially serve as mirrors for our protagonist to prove to us that he in fact, is a good man. The talking garden gnome, voiced by Brian Doyle-Murray, is treated more as an afterthought which makes less sense as the story continues on, leaving an uncomfortable space between what was intended to be funny & a strange choice to utilize an unnamed mental illness and call it his conscience. At the end I was left asking these questions: Did happiness cure his budding schizophrenia? Was it schizophrenia? What other illnesses cause a person to believe a ceramic garden gnome is verbally abusing them? There was no sense of closure there. As far as production value, the camera, audio, & acting were quite good. Jake (Angus Benfield) does seem like a kind person in a rotten stitch, who also happens to be quite misogynistic. Jake’s mother, Rachel Rush (Kathy Garver) is one of the major highlights of this viewing experience, she pulls in the wholesome element quite well. I want to travel with her in her RV. Scotty (Michael Maclane) is the nepo son of the company, it was hard to watch a lovely gay coded character be portrayed as the antagonist, and much like his father Lawrence (Scott King) the story had them changing moods so often that I marveled at the acting prowess of both, as the balancing act felt almost vaudevillian on their part. Krystal (Plastic Martyr) is a shining beacon in this story, taking a character that was seemingly written to be a support beam for the protagonist, managing to bring her to life in such a way as to bypass the limitations that her dialog presented. Her performance granted us time with a beautiful human who deserves a story of her own. I did fanboy for a beat when Melissa Disney graced the screen as the hairstylist. Though I am admittedly biased, it seems almost criminal to have underutilized such an incredible talent. Overall it makes perfect sense that Yellow Bird has achieved recognition in film festivals, it has a budget, the actors all bring something to the story that keeps the characters from becoming empty caricatures, and the crew did their jobs well.

Similar Movies

Manhattan

Manhattan explores how the life of a middle-aged television writer dating a teenage girl is further complicated when he falls in love with his best friend's mistress.

Without a Clue

Sherlock Holmes is as dashing as ever, but with a little secret: Dr. Watson is the brains behind the operation. When Reginald Kincaid, the actor he has hired to play Holmes becomes insufferable, Watson fires him and tries to go out on his own, but finds that he has done too good a job building Holmes up in the public's mind.

Dalecarlians

Mia returns from Stockholm to her parents' home in a small town in Dalecarlia (Dalarna) to celebrate her father's 70th birthday. Her elder sisters Eivor and Gunilla welcome her, but their different lifestyles prevent them from really communicating. The tension builds, and the party that should be a celebration turns out to be a turning point for the family and their friends

The Story of Us

Ben and Katie Jordan are a married couple who go through hard times in fifteen years of marriage.

Skin Deep

Hard-drinking novelist Zach Hutton spirals out of control after his wife and mistress both leave him. Alone and crippled by a bad case of writer's block, Zach slips in and out of casual relationships and one-night stands, while his drinking becomes more and more severe. With the help of a bartender and his therapist, Zach confronts his demons — women and alcohol.

You Kill Me

While drying out on the West Coast, an alcoholic hit man befriends a tart-tongued woman who might just come in handy when it's time for him to return to Buffalo and settle some old scores.

Terkel in Trouble

6th-grader Terkel begins experiencing a streak of bad luck after sitting on a black spider. His teacher dies and is replaced by the strange Justin. At home, Terkel's Uncle Stewart erupts in sporadic fits of rage, and at school Terkel is bullied by two boys after they learn that fat Doris likes him. On a school camping trip, Terkel begins receiving death threats and must figure out who wants to kill him.

The Superwife

Franziska is a romantically inclined housewife with two children and a husband who spends most of his time traveling around the world and working as a director. However, he cheats on her with his actresses. Franziska goes to see the lawyer Enno Winkel about buying a house, but he prefers to handle divorces. And without realizing it, she suddenly inadvertently initiates her own divorce...

Stepmom

Jackie is a divorced mother of two. Isabel is the career minded girlfriend of Jackie’s ex-husband Luke, forced into the role of unwelcome stepmother to their children. But when Jackie discovers she is ill, both women realise they must put aside their differences to find a common ground and celebrate life to the fullest, while they have the chance.

Am Tag als Bobby Ewing starb

1986 - The protest movement against the construction of the nuclear power plant in Brokdorf is on its last legs. Only one rural commune remains: the "Alternative Wohnkollektiv Regenbogen". For them, it could go on and on with endless consensus discussions, shearing sheep and naked communal bathing. One day, the lowland communards are joined by two city dwellers, Hanne and her son Niels. While Hanne gets used to scream therapy and raising vegetables surprisingly quickly - and even more quickly to the tantra games with commune guru Peter - Niels has less and less desire for the dogmatic commune rules. Out of defiance, he joins the violent nuclear power plant resistance, thus upsetting the tranquil chaos of the commune. The big bang, however, comes when a reactor explodes in distant Chernobyl. Exactly on the day Bobby Ewing dies, the petroleum prince from "Dallas" and series favorite of the commune.

Charlie & Louise - Das doppelte Lottchen

Charlie & Louise – Das doppelte Lottchen is a German children's film directed by Joseph Vilsmaier in 1994, starring Corinna Harfouch. It is a film adaptation of the novel Das doppelte Lottchen by Erich Kästner.