"If I Had Legs I'd Kick You" premiered at Sundance 2025. The brutal film, starring Rose Byrne, features Conan O'Brien shifting into a dramatic role.
Bronstein, a bit of a cult figure in the film world, made her directorial debut in 2008 at the SXSW festival with “Yeast,” which featured a pre-fame Greta Gerwig and was hailed by by New Yorker critic Richard Brody as a “mumblecore classic.”
Mary Bronstein's 'If I Had Legs I'd Kick You' wowed the Sundance Film Festival with an all-time Rose Byrne performance.
What will surely go down as one the most stressful movies of the year is “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You,” which premiered Friday at the Sundance Film Festival.
Sundance: Rose Byrne and Conan O'Brien star in Mary Bronstein's surreal freak-out of a movie about the anxieties of contemporary motherhood.
Conan O’Brien, Danielle Macdonald and A$AP Rocky also star in Mary Bronstein’s feverish dark comedy thriller about parenting in extremis and existential black holes.
Rose Byrne attended the 2025 Sundance Film Festival presented by Casamigos yesterday in Park City, Utah. The thespian was there to promote her new psychological thriller "If I Had Legs I'd Kick You." The "Bridesmaids" star was winter ready in a pair of knee-high black booties.
Director Mary Bronstein casts 'Damages' star Rose Byrne as a woman overwhelmed by life in an alternately exhilarating and maddening Safdie-like indie.
The Hollywood Reporter caught up with the veteran comedian at Sundance where he touched down to promote his first film acting job with a role opposite Rose Byrne in an A24 dramatic thriller.
In the wildfires' long shadow, A-listers descend on the annual film fest with renewed purpose and cautious optimism The post Sundance 2025: Conan O’Brien, Juliette Lewis, Steven Yeun and More Hit Park City | Photos appeared first on TheWrap.
Contrary to its title, everyone in If I Had Legs I’d Kick You has their appendages. Rose Byrne’s protagonist, however, does have a wealth of problems and neuroses, and writer/director Mary Bronstein dives into her headspace with a full-bore intensity and immediacy that’s bracing at first,
Oscars host Conan O'Brien says he's still unable to live in his home due to the devastating wildfires in Los Angeles and that the show's organizers “want to be sensitive to what's happened” to ...