If you’re a fan of indie filmmaking, Andrew Bujalski’s exceptionally crafted comedy Funny Ha Ha is as must-see as it gets. A pioneering film of the mumblecore movement, this 2002 slice of life centers ...
[indieWIRE’s weekly reviews are written by critics from Reverse Shot.] Completed in 2002 and having acquired a sizable cult following since that time, “Funny Ha Ha” is finally, mercifully being ...
Democratization of the medium aside, the first scene in writer-director Andrew Bujalski's no-budget Funny Ha Ha is enough to make a person lament the age when anyone with a camera can make a movie.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Every day for the next month, indieWIRE will be republishing profiles and interviews from the past ten years (in their original, retro format) with some of the people that have defined ...
Christian Rudder in writer-director Andrew Bujalksi's 2002 film "Funny Ha Ha." (Courtesy Goodbye Cruel Releasing/Photofest) To hear him tell it, writer-director Andrew Bujalski didn’t deliberately set ...
The unabashedly teensy-budgeted Funny Ha Ha, written and directed by Andrew Bujalski, is actually more like Funny Strange—or even Funny Unsettling. You might be tempted to walk out in the first 20 ...
Marnie (Kate Dollenmayer) is a 23-year-old Bostonite and, as Funny Ha Ha commences, is encountering that perennial post-university problem: what to do without school to lend structure, purpose and a ...