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  1. Safety Not Guaranteed (no Brasil, Sem Segurança Nenhuma) é um filme de comédia, romance e ficção científica, [3] dirigido por Colin Trevorrow e escrito por Derek Connolly. [4] O filme é inspirado em uma edição de 1997 da revista estadunidense Backwoods Home [5] — escrito como uma piada por John Silveira, um funcionário da Backwoods [5] — por uma pessoa pedindo a alguém para ...

  2. There is a moment in Safety Not Guaranteed where Aubrey Plaza's quirky character asks Mark Duplass' even quirkier character, "Is that a guitar?" while sitting in front of a campfire after a romantic day of mutual quirkiness. Jaw agape, knowing exactly what was about to happen, I had to pause the movie and consider whether everything up to this point had been trying to make some kind of ironic ...

  3. The Sundance favorite that led to Steven Spielberg handing Colin Trevorrow the keys to the Jurassic Park franchise, Safety Not Guaranteed matches its high concept with lo-fi emotional smarts. A sharp romantic comedy about the false promise of nostalgia, and missing what’s right in front of you.

  4. "Safety Not Guaranteed" är en väldigt typisk indiefilm i genren dramakomedi, det vill säga ännu en kusin till "Lars and the Real Girl", "Juno" och "Eagle vs. Shark". Med det sagt, så är den markeringen ingenting negativt. Visst är den kanske aldrig hysteriskt rolig eller besvarar några större, universala frågor.

  5. 28 de dic. de 2012 · Safety Not Guaranteed – review. A mumblecore foray into the world of a shelf-stacking conspiracist trying to build a time machine is funny, well-acted and weirdly transcendental, writes Philip ...

  6. SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED. Comedy, Drama. When an unusual classified ad inspires three cynical Seattle magazine employees to look for the story behind it, they discover a mysterious eccentric named Kenneth, a likable but paranoid supermarket clerk, who believes he's solved the riddle of time travel and intends to depart again soon. Together ...

  7. Darius Britt (Aubrey Plaza) is a disillusioned college graduate who lives at home with her widower father, and who interns at a Seattle magazine. One of the magazine's writers, Jeff Schwensen (Jake M. Johnson), proposes to investigate a newspaper classified ad that reads: "Wanted: Somebody to go back in time with me.