#
buy premium
CouchTuner
Do you have a video playback issues? Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
CouchTuner
 FAVORITE
ico
We are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.
Get Premium
Watch on MixDrop/MyStream
CouchTuner

Diamond Tongues

Description
The movie is about Edith who dreams of being a successful actress, but cannot land any roles. When she can't figure out what she is doing wrong, she starts to descend into a downward spiral of destructive behavior.
COMMENTS (0) Sort by Newest
Newest Oldest
CouchTuner User
+ Add comment
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
Diamond Tongues
CRITICS OF "Diamond Tongues"
CouchTuner
National Post
Resource

August 12, 2015

The second feature by Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson, Diamond Tongues lives in its careful attention to detail, the meticulous but breezy way it captures Edith's meandering life as much as her increasingly destructive disenchantment.
CouchTuner
Globe and Mail
Resource

August 07, 2015

Suggests All About Eve by way of The King of Comedy: contempt and envy reign and the threat of disaster closely follows.
CouchTuner
Toronto Sun
Resource

August 06, 2015

Goldstein has something to fall back on if this music thing doesn't work out. In an impressive feature debut, she carries literally an entire movie.
CouchTuner
The Playlist
Resource

August 12, 2015

Diamond Tongues is refreshing because it isn't an indictment of a demographic, or even of Edith, but is a portrait of a young woman whose ambition has curdled into something more nasty along the way.
CouchTuner
New York Times
Resource

February 18, 2016

Ms. Goldstein gives a performance that requires her to swing between disarming and loathsome. She demonstrates impressive skill in slowly peeling away her character's charm.
CouchTuner
NOW Toronto

August 06, 2015

Diamond Tongues works both as a character study and an exercise in cringe comedy: you spend an hour and a half watching someone make a lot of bad choices, hoping that she'll learn from at least one of them.
CouchTuner
Slant Magazine
Resource

February 15, 2016

Throughout, Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson purposely indulge Hollywood formula only to subvert it.
CouchTuner
Consequence of Sound
Resource

June 22, 2015

Diamond Tongues is a brilliant and realistic portrait of the young artist as a bitter borderline failure.
CouchTuner
Hollywood Reporter
Resource

August 12, 2015

That she nonetheless emerges as all too relatable is a credit to Moondi's astute screenplay and the nerve-rattling performance by its lead performer, here making an auspicious acting debut.
CouchTuner
Movie Nation
Resource

February 09, 2016

Witheringly funny, accurate and in the end touching take on a "type" -- the acting wannabe who turns bitter when success is elusive.
CouchTuner