Everyday Is Like Sunday (film) explained

Everyday Is Like Sunday
Director:Pavan Moondi
Producer:Brian Robertson
Pavan Moondi
Music:Kathryn Calder
Cinematography:Joseph Puglia
Runtime:90 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English

Everyday Is Like Sunday is a 2013 Canadian independent film directed by Pavan Moondi. It stars David Dineen-Porter, Coral Osborne and Adam Gurfinkel as twenty-something friends and roommates trying to come to terms with adulthood.

The film had a limited theatrical release in Canada on August 16, 2013,[1] and was acquired for Canadian distribution by Mongrel Media in January 2014.[2]

Release

The film premiered to generally favorable reviews. Manori Ravindran for the National Post wrote "Millennial angst in gritty urban centres could warrant its own section in The New York Times. We’re poor, we’re jobless, we’re lonely, we get it. But there’s an honesty and whip smart humour to the micro-budget Everyday Is Like Sunday that separates it from similar fare.[3] Exclaim!s Kevin Scott praised the film as a "fiercely funny depiction of a specific brand of late 20s malaise."[4]

Notes and References

  1. News: Anderson . Jason . Everyday is Like Sunday: Local indie comedy about conflicted young people is smart, energetic: Interview . August 15, 2013 . . August 27, 2019.
  2. News: Vlessing . Etan . Mongrel Media picks up rights to Everyday Is Like Sunday . December 16, 2013 . . August 27, 2019.
  3. News: Ravindran . Manori . Everyday Is Like Sunday, reviewed: It's about poor, jobless, lonely Torontonian twentysomethings – and it's smart . August 15, 2013 . . August 27, 2019.
  4. News: Scott . Kevin . Everyday Is Like Sunday . August 15, 2013 . . August 27, 2019.