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DIRECTORS OF "Song One"
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CREATORS OF "Song One"
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HEROES OF "Song One"
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CRITICS OF "Song One"
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TheFilmFile.com
Resource

March 24, 2015

"Song One" is an enjoyable watch, but an even better listen, its songs bringing a thoughtful melodic glow to modestly endearing material.
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Seattle Weekly
Resource

December 21, 2015

There's something just too precious about it all.
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RogerEbert.com
Resource

January 23, 2015

In her feature debut, writer/director Kate Barker-Froyland tends to tiptoe away from the dramatic high notes that audiences often crave and comes up a stanza or two short from a fulfilling resolution.
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amNewYork
Resource

February 03, 2015

There are only so many scenes of Hathaway tearing up while either a) staring at her brother or b) watching James strum his guitar that one can take.
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Newark Star-Ledger

January 23, 2015

The film, like the world it's part of, remains just a little too precious, a little too self-involved, a little too insular. Instead of singing out, directly to us, it hums its little tune only to itself.
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The Film Stage
Resource

June 21, 2016

t's the scenes without music that feel false, and Song One has far too many of them.
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Rolling Stone

January 29, 2015

Despite the delicate shadings Hathaway brings to the role, Song One moves inexorably from wan to wearying.
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NOW Toronto

December 18, 2015

If you're a Hathaway fan, this will be worth your time; she's in every scene, and builds a convincingly tense relationship with screen mom Mary Steenburgen. But if you're looking for the next Once, well, this isn't it.
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Philadelphia Inquirer
Resource

January 23, 2015

Starts off as a singularly strong slice-of-life drama before dissipating into thin air.
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Combustible Celluloid
Resource

March 27, 2015

Writer/director Kate Barker-Froyland doesn't bother to disguise Song One as something it's not.
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Chicago Sun-Times
Resource

January 23, 2015

There are no real surprises here, just lives played out quietly and succinctly under the seductive spell of music.
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Los Angeles Times
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January 23, 2015

Anyone with the slightest allergy to emo-tinged millennial attitudinizing should steer clear.
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