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One Day

2011

R

1 h 47 m

United States

Drama

Romance

After spending the night together on the eve of their college graduation, Dexter and Emma are shown each year on the same date to see where they are in their lives. They are sometimes together, and sometimes not.
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7.0 /10

178362 people rated

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Top Cast(18)
starring avatar
Anne Hathaway
Emma
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Jim Sturgess
Dexter
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Patricia Clarkson
Alison
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Tom Mison
Callum
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Jodie Whittaker
Tilly
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Tim Key
Customer
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Rafe Spall
Ian
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Joséphine de La Baume
Marie
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Ken Stott
Steven
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Heida Reed
Ingrid
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Amanda Fairbank-Hynes
Tara
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Gil Alma
Waiter
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David Ajala
Floor Manager
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Georgia King
Suki
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Ukweli Roach
Rapper
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Sutara Gayle
Mrs. Major
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Clara Paget
Cocktail Waitress
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Matt Berry
Aaron

User Review

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L

13/05/2026 01:15
So you all are telling me I had used up me last data to download a beautiful movie know to see a fucking kd no that's just trolling😒
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Dirk Francis Tagal

06/02/2026 16:40
wrong movie guyss
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Brian Wisso

28/08/2025 09:44
nice
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Roshan Amir (2024-DS-48)

15/04/2025 19:38
in English language the movie is changed why??
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ZompdeZomp

16/05/2024 07:48
One Day
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Qd1MqE

12/04/2024 09:19
.
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ABzYJp

06/03/2024 13:14
wow
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makeupbygigi

14/02/2024 04:06
One Day_360P
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Farah Mabunda

22/11/2022 10:35
After the poor trailers and even poorer reviews, I wasn't expecting anything from this film but the interesting premise still motivated me to watch it. As anticipated, it was a trainwreck essentially from the start. For starters, it's structured all wrong; it feels so rushed through in a large part, with a lot of the focus only being on three or four days over the course of two decades. Of course with that being said, it never even feels like two decades have past. They change the actors looks slightly and I like that they didn't try to go overboard with the makeup and everything, but they look too old at the beginning and way too young at the end. What's worse though is that it doesn't feel like the time progresses at all. It feels like you're watching a day-by-day story as opposed to one that passes over years. I think the structure messes this up, but I also have to put fault on the actors for this. In the later years they should feel like the same people who have lived the experiences we've seen throughout the film, but they really don't. It's like they read the scenes for each new year and decided to play the characters differently in each year. I really wish that Sturgess would live up to the potential I think he has, but he keeps choosing awful roles and as his counterpoint Anne Hathaway is as awful as ever. People put way too much focus on judging accents as the key to a performance, but her accent is so off the charts absurd here it borders on hilarious. She goes through at least three different accents, just in one scene. An interesting premise, but practically everyone dropped the ball here. A real shame from Lone Scherfig, coming off the sensational An Education.
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samara -riahi

22/11/2022 10:35
In the late 80s a girl named Emma (Anne Hathaway) is a college student who meets fellow graduate Dexter (Jim Sturgess). They're about to sleep together one evening but decide to remain friends instead. Over the course of twenty years we see how circumstances and other people have kept them divided when they just want to be together. Dexter finds himself hosting a ghastly television show, while being warned by his sick mother (Patricia Clarkson) that he isn't a particularly nice person anymore. He insists that he just wants to have fun, despite being critically panned and moving between women. Emma works her way up from a job in a fast food restaurant, to a teacher and then eventually into a successful author. To the distress of Dexter she has a serious relationship with an obnoxious comedian, which puts her real desires on hold. Late in the timeline, Dexter is married rather unhappily and has a baby girl to look after. An unlikeable leading man makes this one day too many. It's impossible to say what type of movie One Day is. It postures as a comedy but it barely raises a single laugh. And though it also lacks dramatic impact for much of its length too, its one climax is so shocking and over the top that it will leave a sour taste in your mouth. Do not consider this as a date movie. You will not be popular. You also have to wonder late in the movie what the point was. Director Lone Scherfig (An Education, 2009) tries to end things on a very syrupy note. That's very nice for one of the characters but unrewarding for the audience who have waded through twenty years in the lives of these unappealing characters for nothing. The message is ultimately a very obvious, unoriginal and simple one: that life pulls people in opposite directions but happiness can be found in one single moment. Using an extended chronological structure is a gimmick. It allows for little on screen titles to appear in the frame, just like in (500) Days of Summer (2009) but it refuses to enrich character. A film like Blue Valentine (2010) is infinitively more intelligent because it realises that character is structure. It contrasts the past and present day to visualise the changing personalities of its leads and the impact on their relationship. The script by David Nicholls, adapting his own novel, lacks this kind of sophistication. Having the film move through such an extensive period suggests that there will be arching transformations in the characters. But unfortunately Sturgess remains continuously unlikeable all throughout this movie. His character is arrogant, rude, promiscuous and irresponsible. And briefly touching on his fractured relationship with his parents does not make him anymore sympathetic. Patricia Clarkson is barely in this movie because she has so few scenes and I wasn't moved by her appearances as the film intended. One of the golden rules of the romantic comedy is broken here: you don't understand why Emma and Dexter belong together. This is a detriment to the film's plotting and the motives of the characters. We're left wondering what this apparently sophisticated woman continues to see in this buffoon, especially when she's already with better company. Even after that huge climax Dexter still has a moment of madness. Only at the very end does he wake up to himself. The actors aren't really to blame. Anne Hathaway is such a pleasant actress in almost everything she does, comedy or otherwise. But this sketchy, underwritten role wastes her talents and doesn't stretch her chops at all. She's made to look dorky and uptight with her over-sized glasses, only to move into little but quirkiness. And Jim Sturgess who I liked in Across the Universe (2007) and The Way Back (2010) is gifted too, with no shortage of personality. He just happens to be playing a real jerk. If that's what he intended, he certainly succeeded. As far as the rebirth of frank romantic-comedies goes this is a pretty uninspired and limp entry.
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