Looking for Kitty (2004) Poster

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5/10
Ed Burns should take a cue from Woody Allen
jrosenf14 August 2006
This is another New York-centric little character-driven film about a down-on-his-luck private detective, Jack(Burns), who takes a case for a sad-sack husband, Abe(Krumholtz) searching for his recently departed wife. Jack is a lonely man who has lost his wife and feels screwed by the system. Abe is a baseball coach from Upstate who longs for the return of his beloved Kitty. But she evidently tired of Abe's small-town ways and devotion to the kids on his team, so she took off to shack up with a rock star in a Manhattan condo. Despite their differences, and Jack's desire to be left alone, Abe persuades (for $500 extra/week) Jack to let him assist in his investigation; their daily interaction leads both men to learn something about themselves.

All the typical Burns' traits are there: poor schlub with relationship problems? Check. Men attempting to find themselves, usually with the help of unattainable women? Check. Witty dialog and terrific one-liners? Check. Enough shots of downtown New York to film a travel guide? Check. I mean, it's a decent little movie that hits a few high notes, such as when Jack wistfully gives historical back-ground about the "holdout" buildings left in the booming megalopolis that is downtown, or the gut-wrenching scenes of Burns pining for his lost wife. But there really isn't much to it, and what is there, we've seen it all from Mr. Burns before. And much better (i.e. Brothers McMullen, She's the One).

My advice to Ed: next time out, take a cue from the Wood-man and move your tale to another locale. Woody finally abandoned his beloved city, hopped across the pond to London, added some intrigue, and the result was his biggest critical and box office success in years, MATCH POINT; it was so successful he opted to make his next film there as well, although early reviews of SCOOP are not flattering. But maybe you could try Ireland, and add a little mystery or a torrid affair. Heck, even add Scarlett Johansson if you must. Because we love ya, Ed, for your everyman charm and ease in front of, and behind, the camera. But I for one am growing tired of your one note acts. You have the talent to do so much better.
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7/10
Two guys in search of getting over hard times with wives.
irvingwarner17 October 2007
I think this is a quiet movie, but very satisfying in an intelligent way. It is an actors' movie, with Burns and Krumholtz doing excellent jobs: Burns as the detective, and Krumholtz as the client. Its use of New York city--a movie location so unceasingly used by movies and t.v.--is photographed to unusually good advantage. This is a movie about quests: One, the abandoned, loving baseball-devoted husband, and the second, the widowed detective, getting on with life one day at a time. Many good vignettes in this movie, but it is not the sort of story for those lacking patience and an enjoyment of the subtle. There's much to be said about movie making that allows abundant time for actors to be on camera and develop a scene between one another.
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5/10
middle of the road flick
wrlang27 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Looking for Kitty is about a Poughkeepsie baseball coach who enlists the help of a NYC PI to find his wife Kitty that took off months before. They hit it off pretty well as they work together to find Kitty learning about each other's lives and becoming buddies. The wife of the PI died some time before and the PI has a hard time getting beyond it. The PI and the coach both come to terms with their losses and find that its time to move on. By the time they find kitty, the coach has changed his mind about getting back with her. The film is of A quality, but the plot and dialog is a little mundane. The acting is the only thing that made the film believable.
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Decent script
Gordon-111 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This is a film about a man hiring a private detective to find his missing wife. Along the way, he learns to let go and live his own life.

This is not just a detective story as I first imagined it to be. It is about learning to accept loss, deal with it and learn to let go. The private detective (Edward Burns) does a lot of detective work with a hilarious interrogation style speech. Yet, he comes up with all these counselling methods to help his client cope with his loss.

This film does not have expensive sets or nice costumes. It relies on the script to tell us a decent story. This film is effective, and makes you wonder why there are people out there who simply cannot let go.
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7/10
unobtrusive story of coming back from loss
faduci6 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
"Looking for Kitty" is a slow, anticlimactic movie about two men, whose life was shattered by the loss of a woman. While the one, a small town baseball coach (David Krumholtz), has decided to ignore reality and keep up his hope against an overwhelming amount of indicators he shouldn't, the other, a New York private investigator (Edward Burns), has basically given up on life as a whole.

They meet when the coach hires the PI to help him find his wife. The search disrupts the PIs self chosen solitude, who is now confronted with the coach's resistance to accept reality. During the time they spend together their perspectives slowly change and in the end both realize that they may not get what they want, but that they don't have to settle for nothing either.

The movie uses New York not only as a background, but also as a metaphor for how your point of view changes your perception of life. For Kitty it's the exiting place to escape to from a dull life, the coach feels (literally) disconnected from his well defined world and for the PI the city represents the more or less hopeless struggle of man against stronger, evil powers (not literally). Over time the characters not only adjust to their lives a little better, but also to the city and its places.

The acting is fine, the pace well adjusted, the cinematography matches the story, the movie will not force its message onto the viewer. It's nice for a calm autumn afternoon, when you are not looking for either action, comedy or drama. My sole criticism is that the PI and coach's change in attitude towards their life isn't that believable. They obviously have been stuck for quite some time and their time together does not lead to any major new revelations that would necessarily trigger such a change. It's a little bit out of the blue when they find a way to better cope with their loss all of a sudden. The script should have developed this more.
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4/10
Comedy?
nogodnomasters22 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I don't know why this is called a "comedy" on the box, nor do I see the Woody Allen aspect of this film. Bittersweet is a very apt description for this slow paced movie.

Abe goes to the big city to find his wife Kitty. He hires a detective, Jack to find her. During the movie we find out that she dumped Abe because his life was as boring as this film. Kitty is living with a rock star. During the course of the week Abe and Jack become friends and come to terms with their life in its current state (yawn). Nothing to see here folks.

The guy who printed "comedy" on the cover owes me $2.00. The acting was even good at times, but didn't compensate for a very dull script.
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5/10
Okay Movie
OakFire2811 February 2007
The coach was from Peekskill, New York not Poughkeepsie. But, that's something that the coach reminds the detective a couple of times. The acting was good and the story was interesting. I did pick up on one error. The detective (a resident of New York City) drives a car with New Jersey plates. I was hoping they'd explain that but I guess someone overlooked it. Rachel Dratch plays her usual nutty female but for once her part has a little more meat to it. The coach from Upstate NY has a NYC accent for some reason but little things like that can be overlooked. The locations are authentic, they didn't try to pass off Montreal or Seattle as New York City. Jack,the detective, apparently doesn't like the present administration in Washington and let's everyone know about it. I enjoyed the movie and recommend it.
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10/10
I thought excellent
rhinotrade-124 June 2007
I thought it was a excellent film with nice soundtrack. Not every movie will be a Michael Bay production. It has a thinking man's view of change and moving on. The film starts with someone who Abe(ball coach) that has no clue, yet still thinks he wants his wife back. Jack (Burns) is a bitter guy who slowly leaves his bitterness and lets go of his own loss(wife dying) as Abe (ball coach)learns he has nothing in common with his wife that ran away. They both grow as a result of their unlikely working relationship that becomes a true friendship. Great supporting roles with Chris Parnell(SNL) playing a douchebag record producer. Rachel Dratch (SNL) playing a lonely soul who is looking for something else. Abe is awesome as a baseball coach who batted 322 in high school with no errors his junior and senior year YEAH! ABout coping and dealing with change, loved it.
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8/10
Looking for a great night at the movies? Get this wonderful Ed Burns film, its funny and touching
inkblot1128 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Abe (David Krumholtz) is beside himself with agony. As a high school baseball coach in a small city and married to his first true sweetheart, he assumed things were near perfect. Alas, his estranged wife Kitty has run off to New York City to follow a rock star, Ron Stewart. Rumor has it that the two are a couple. Although he feels like a fish out of water, Abe journeys to Manhattan to hire private detective Jack (Edward Burns) to find his lost love. Jack agrees to help Abe, for a price, but warns the jilted hubby that she may not want to see him again. Yet, Abe persists. He can't believe that her new mate is more than a passing fling but if it is, he wants Kitty to tell him face to face what went wrong. As the two of them search (Abe pays Jack extra to tag along on the investigation), Abe's world gets a bit larger as he learns to eat new ethnic foods and appreciate the unusual aspects of the country's largest metropolis. He even runs into another woman (Rachel Dratch), time and again, a lady who may have eyes for this simple coach. Jack, too, comes part way out of a funk he has been in, due to the death of his wife a couple years earlier. But, in the final analysis, will they be able to find Kitty and what will she do? First, Edward Burns is one great independent film maker. He lives and breathes Manhattan and has a rare gift for comedy and human observation. This new movie is not as biting as Sidewalks of New York but has a quieter, gentler nature that is most touching. Burns and Krumholtz, an unlikely couple at first, become a wonderful team of humor and warmth. The rest of the cast, including Dratch and all of the others, are likewise great, even if their names are not well known. Sets, costumes, and photography are worthy, too. If your have been a fan of Burns since The Brothers McMullen, you should rush to find this one as well. Conversely, if you have never seen this stellar writer/director's work, this one is a nice place to begin your journey to admiration for Mr. Burns, indeed.
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This is what film is all about.
Squaredealer3324 September 2007
It's a small story about "small" people. If you like films about real world people, see this film. It's a film that doesn't flinch in showing small town New York. It's a great achievement in American film – I'm sure no one will notice. Maybe the audience doesn't exist for these films anymore, but that shouldn't prevent the making of them. Make them for the audience of the future.

Give this film some time and people will come to it. The score was noteworthy – very nice. Somebody did a great job putting this film together. It flows they way a good story should – just enough humor and just enough pathos for a complete story. Do you like the films made after the fall of the Hollywood system and before the rise of the Lucas/Spielberg juggernaut? This one is good enough to play with the big boys.

Like the film characters, these film makers are some of the last hold-outs in making film stories the way they should be made -- character driven, and about something.
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8/10
Lovely, small, story
generic230-116 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I came upon this movie by accident, and it's gentle tone, and small character sketches completely charmed me. A small, but lovely story about two men who are trying to overcome loss, and the bond that grows between them. It's very small, and intimate, so it's not surprising that some people didn't really like this movie. David Krumholz is really great and moving. Ed Burns, who I don't always like, is perfect in this. His grief about his wife surrounds him in his performance. It's not heavy handed, but very subtle and gentle. An excellent movie. A lovely way to spend 2 hours on a Saturday afternoon.

Catching movies like this by accident on HBO kind of makes me mad, because, I never heard of the movie, and there is absolutely nothing about it that would warrant it not being promoted or put in theaters. Sometimes movies are a 10, but most movies are a 5 or 6, and when a movie, no matter how small, is an 8, that makes it special. They make 200 million dollar shitty movies all the time that never recoup their cost. So, why should this lovely thing not get it's chance? I bet it was made for a song, and could have made a small profit for the studio, if marketed right.
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10/10
Burns stays hot in my book!
meeza15 November 2006
Here Kitty Kitty Kitty Kitty, Here Kitty Kitty Kitty Kitty! Boy, do I need pussy! OK, enough! "Looking For Kitty" is another Edward Burns creation which I found to be of catwalk material. Burns plays Jack Stanton, a New York introverted private detective who takes on a missing person case. Yes, he is Looking For Kitty. Stanton himself has been missing the riches of life for a long time because he grieves the loss of his dead wife. David Krumholtz co-stars as Abe Fiannico, the Midwestern idiosyncratic baseball coach who travels to New York to find his missing wife. Yes, he is also Looking For Kitty. Abe hires Stanton to, yea you got it, to be Looking For Kitty. OK, I will stop "Kitting" around. New York plays a central figure in the film's symbolism & richness. Burns subtle, but yet, moving "Looking For Kitty" will quietly "stray" in your system for a while. Writer-Director Burns continues to be unappreciated by the film industry. He is the ultimate film voice of the Irish-American community. His acting effort as the cocky, standoffish Stanton was commendable. The petite Krumholtz gave a big performance as the desperate & honest Abe. One of the supreme supporting performances I have seen so far this year. "Looking For Kitty" is a prototype cinematic tool kit on an effective dialogue-driven film. ***** Excellent
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8/10
Editing issues
itstsw3 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The Coach talked to Edward Burns about one of the players on his team pitching a perfect game and winning the game 15 to 3. The editor obviously did not know much about America's national pastime. You can't pitch a perfect game and give up three runs. When you give up a run the game pitched is no longer a perfect game. The Coach also demonstrated deceased ball player Ted Williams' bat swing to Edward Burns; however, he demonstrated Ted Williams batting from the right side. Ted Williams always batted left-handed. I really enjoy Edward Burns' movies. I like his use of the characters and the local neighborhoods and how he speaks about the history and development of the city.
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