The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) 2017

As the Meyerowitz family converges on New York, the complexities of adulthood and familial ties are laid bare, all under the guise of celebrating patriarch Harold's artistic legacy.

As the Meyerowitz family converges on New York, the complexities of adulthood and familial ties are laid bare, all under the guise of celebrating patriarch Harold's artistic legacy.

Does The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) have end credit scenes?

No!

The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) does not have end credit scenes.

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Metacritic

80

Metascore

7.0

User Score

Rotten Tomatoes
review

%

TOMATOMETER

review

0%

User Score

IMDb

6.9 /10

IMDb Rating

TMDB

65

%

User Score

Plot Summary

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Get the full story of The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) with a detailed plot summary. Dive into its themes, characters, and the twists that make it a must-watch.


After separating from his wife, unemployed Danny Meyerowitz moves in with his father, Harold, a retired Bard College art professor and sculptor, and his fourth wife, Maureen, a pleasant but foggy hippie. Jean is his sister, and they have a younger half-brother, Matthew. Danny is close to his daughter, Eliza, a freshman film student at Bard. Eliza shows one of her sexually provocative films to the family, who try hard not to show their shock, instead complimenting its energy and production value.

Some of Harold’s work has been selected as part of a faculty group show at Bard, but he refuses to be part of a group show. Danny and Harold attend the MoMA retrospective of a friend and contemporary of Harold’s, the successful L.J. Shapiro. There, neither father nor son feels comfortable; Harold feels that the art world has forgotten him, and chooses to literally run away down the street. Danny meets Shapiro’s daughter, his childhood friend, Loretta, but is forced to leave to chase after Harold.

Harold’s younger son, Matthew, a successful financial advisor to rock stars on the West Coast in Los Angeles, is in New York on business, and meets Harold for lunch with an accountant friend. They try to convince Harold to sell his Manhattan home and its sculpture, for he can barely pay the townhouse’s utilities. Harold tells them that the decision to sell the house is a private family decision, and stalks out. At a third restaurant, he criticizes the prices, but orders lavishly when Matthew says he will pay.

During lunch at the restaurant, Harold feels offended by the arrogant manner of another patron, and gets Matthew to chase him when he alleges that the patron swapped jackets with him. Although mistaken, father and son bond slightly in self-righteous indignation. That evening, they pay a visit to Matthew’s mother and Harold’s second wife, Julia, who has since married a man named Cody, a wealthy philistine. She tells them that she is sorry that she was not a better mother to Harold’s two children from a previous marriage (Danny and Jean); her directness makes them uncomfortable, and they are eager to leave. Matthew resents Harold for preferring a life of art over money. “I beat you!”, he screams at his father’s departing Volvo.

Harold is diagnosed with a chronic subdural hematoma. He enters the hospital, where, as the days pass, his children learn to manage his care, after first leaning on Harold’s doctor and nurse to do it. Outside the hospital, Jean tells her brothers that the family friend, who happens to be visiting Harold at the moment, exposed himself and masturbated in front of her when she was a child. Upset with the revelation, Matthew and Danny decide to beat the friend, until they learn that he is an elderly man who requires nurse care. Instead, they damage the friend’s car with mounting exhilaration. Jean expresses her disappointment in her brother and half-brother, having wanted someone to just listen to her instead of doing such damage without her consent.

At Bard, representing their father at the faculty group show, Matthew and Danny get into a fight, of sorts, on the quad; later, bloody and crying, each makes drug-addled remarks as Harold’s proxies, mostly about themselves, and Matthew ends up breaking down emotionally during his speech. As Harold convalesces at Maureen’s place in the country (the townhouse was sold, despite Matthew’s change of heart), it dawns on Matthew and Harold that Harold’s favorite sculpture, titled “Matthew”, a lifelong object of resentment for Danny and Jean, was likely based on his feelings for young Danny.

Danny, who, until now, has been solicitous toward his father, refuses to care for him while Maureen is away, and accepts his brother’s offer of a trip to California, but he forgives him for his failures as a dad. On the way to the flight, he meets Loretta, now single, and she suggests that they go together to the screening of a film that Eliza has made. In the basement of The Whitney, Eliza uncovers her grandfather’s sculpture, long believed to have been lost.

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