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Manchester by the Sea

I can't beat it.
2016 | 138m | English

(343026 votes)

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Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

After his older brother passes away, Lee Chandler is forced to return home to care for his 16-year-old nephew. There he is compelled to deal with a tragic past that separated him from his family and the community where he was born and raised.
Release Date: Nov 17, 2016
Director: Kenneth Lonergan
Writer: Kenneth Lonergan
Genres: Drama
Keywords boston, massachusetts, boat, massachusetts, dysfunctional family, hospital, death, ex-wife, mental health, legal guardian, depressed, funeral, brother, sadness, loss, grief, house fire, nephew, nonlinear timeline, ex-husband ex-wife relationship, dysfunctional life, tragic
Production Companies Big Indie Pictures, Pearl Street Films, K Period Media, B Story, The Affleck/Middleton Project, The Media Farm
Box Office Revenue: $79,000,000
Budget: $9,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 07, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Casey Affleck Lee Chandler
Lucas Hedges Patrick Chandler
Michelle Williams Randi Chandler
Kyle Chandler Joe Chandler
C.J. Wilson George
Gretchen Mol Elise Henderson
Matthew Broderick Jeffrey Garner
Anna Baryshnikov Sandy
Heather Burns Jill
Ivy O'Brien Young Patrick Chandler
Kara Hayward Silvie McGann
Tom Kemp Stan Chandler
Josh Hamilton Wes (Joe's Lawyer)
Tate Donovan Hockey Coach
Ruibo Qian Dr. Bethany
Robert Sella Dr. Muller
Susan Pourfar Nurse Irene
Stephen McKinley Henderson Mr. Emery
Chloe Dixon Suzy Chandler
Ellie Teves Karen Chandler
Mary Mallen Sharon
Richard Donelly Mr. Martinez (1st Tenant)
Virginia Loring Cooke Mrs. Groom (2nd Tenant)
Quincy Tyler Bernstine Marianne (3rd Tenant)
Missy Yager Mrs. Olsen (4th Tenant)
Ben Hanson Bartender
Lewis D. Wheeler 1st Businessman at Bar
Anthony Estrella 2nd Businessman at Bar
Paul Meredith Paul (Assistant Principal)
Carolyn Pickman Paul's Assistant
Christian Mallen CJ
Oscar Wahlberg Joel
Wendy Overly Wes's Assistant
Jackson Damon Otto
Shawn Fitzgibbon Tom Doherty (Ping-Pong Player)
Glenn McKiel Manchester Police Chief
Joe Stapleton Fire Marshall
Brian Chamberlain Investigating Detective
Kenneth Lonergan Manchester Pedestrian
Jami Tennille Janine
Liam McNeill Josh (Randi's Husband)
Danae Nason Rachel (Randi's Friend)
Allyn Burrows Father Martin
Nellie Lonergan 1st Girl at School ("Godspell")
Brian A. White Jerry (Guy in Boat Yard Office)
Erica McDermott Sue (Angry Boss in Boat Yard Office)
Frank Garvin Homeowner
William Bornkessel George's Son (uncredited)
Kt Baldassaro Bar Patron (uncredited)
Name Job
Jody Lee Lipes Director of Photography
Douglas Aibel Casting
Ruth De Jong Production Design
Melissa Toth Costume Design
Carolyn Pickman Casting
Dann Fink ADR Voice Casting
Mark DeSimone ADR & Dubbing
Joanna Fang Foley
Declan Baldwin Unit Production Manager
Patrick M. Walsh Stunt Coordinator
Ryan Collison Foley Recording Engineer
Jennifer Lame Editor
Florencia Martin Set Decoration
Leslie Bloome Foley Artist
Summer Phoenix Thanks
Lesley Barber Original Music Composer
Jourdan Henderson Art Direction
Henry Russell Bergstein Casting Associate
Matt Bouldry Casting Associate
Zach Zatet Casting Assistant
Brannon Smithwick Art Department Assistant
Morgan Kling Property Master
Beth Anderson Assistant Property Master
Andrea Ulrich Script Supervisor
Mick Gormaley Music Editor
Linda Cohen Music Supervisor
Joanna Murphy Assistant Costume Designer
Amy Pickering Costume Supervisor
Alanna Keenan Set Costumer
Susanna Brown Tailor
Petr Hlinomaz Camera Operator
Terrence Hayes Camera Operator
Brant S. Fagan Steadicam Operator
Claire Folger Still Photographer
Joshua Dreyfus Gaffer
Robert Kelly Dolly Grip
Patrick Quinn First Assistant Camera
Julien Zeitouni First Assistant Camera
Warren A. Weberg Key Grip
Julius Horsthuis Visual Effects Supervisor
Dan Edelstein ADR Editor
Peter Stevenson Boom Operator
Roland Vajs Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Foley Editor
Jacob Ribicoff Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor
Liz Bernstrom Makeup Department Head
Sherryn Smith Key Makeup Artist
Rob Fitz Makeup Artist
Ivan Barahona Digital Intermediate
Christina Delerme Digital Intermediate
Joey Handy Digital Intermediate
Jack Lewars Digital Intermediate
Alexa Zimmerman Dialogue Editor
Michael Fuchs Steadicam Operator
Michael J. Moore First Assistant Director
David Blazina Second Assistant Director
Paul Marini Stunt Coordinator
Tim LaDue Second Second Assistant Director
Ryan McCoy Johnson Leadman
Matthew Nutter Graphic Designer
Hannah Rhein Set Costumer
Kevin S. Parker Sound Mixer
Ryan Baker Utility Sound
Fred Young Best Boy Electric
Teresa Hays Best Boy Grip
Ed Searles Grip
Karl Hartman Production Coordinator
Cynthia Garcia Walker Production Accountant
Jill Sacco Production Secretary
Frank Barbosa Hair Department Head
Elizabeth Cecchini Key Hair Stylist
Stuart Macphee Post Production Supervisor
Kai Quinlan Location Manager
Alex Berard Location Manager
Jeff Dionne Assistant Location Manager
Taylor Levy Assistant Editor
Billy Dowd Extras Casting
Wendy Overly Dialect Coach
Michael Ricci Special Effects Supervisor
Tyler Newhouse ADR Recordist
James Shearman Orchestrator
Risa Uchida Battis Set Dresser
Timothy Lewis Set Dresser
Michael Potter Set Dresser
Amy Teitter Set Dresser
Jeff Kryvicky Title Designer
Kenneth Lonergan Director, Writer
Name Title
Gigi Pritzker Producer
Kevin J. Walsh Producer
Chris Moore Producer
John Krasinski Executive Producer
Declan Baldwin Executive Producer
Lauren Beck Producer
Kimberly Steward Producer
Ryan Stowell Co-Producer
Josh Godfrey Executive Producer
Bill Migliore Executive Producer
Matt Damon Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Actor Casey Affleck Won
Academy Awards Best Director Kenneth Lonergan Nominated
Golden Globes Best Picture N/A Nominated
Golden Globes Best Actor Casey Affleck Won
Golden Globes Best Director Kenneth Lonergan Nominated
Golden Globes Best Actress Michelle Williams Gamaker Nominated
Golden Globes Best Supporting Actress Michelle Williams Gamaker Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
BAFTA Awards Best Actor Casey Affleck Won
Spirit Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
SAG Awards Best Actor Casey Affleck Won
SAG Awards Best Supporting Actor Lucas Hedges Nominated
SAG Awards Best Supporting Actor Mahershala Ali Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 43 77 31
2024 5 100 136 72
2024 6 62 127 25
2024 7 40 75 25
2024 8 32 59 20
2024 9 21 27 15
2024 10 35 64 19
2024 11 33 61 23
2024 12 34 87 21
2025 1 31 43 26
2025 2 27 42 5
2025 3 9 35 3
2025 4 9 14 5
2025 5 16 60 6
2025 6 14 67 4
2025 7 5 7 4
2025 8 4 6 3
2025 9 7 16 3

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Year Month High Avg
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2025 2 586 728
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2025 1 369 811
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2024 12 338 707
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 549 760
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 690 848
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 878 918

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Reviews

lofgents
1.0

I watched this movie based on its high score, I found the movie to be too long and maybe should have been edited down to 90 minutes or less. I usually go for exteneded versions of movies as I like to really get into the characters and don't normally like it to be over to quickly. This was one of th ... ose occasions where instead of entertainment it was a chore to watch, I didn't find the actors performances anything special or the context of the story. Overall very boring and if I am going to score this it would be a 1 out of 10. I did stick with it to the end and gave it its best shot, but not for me.

Jun 23, 2021
lasttimeisaw
8.0

American dramatist Kenneth Lonergan’s third feature, after his career has been punishingly stalled by the ill-fated MARGARET (2011), made in 2005 as a much-anticipated follow-up to his sterling debut YOU CAN COUNT ON ME (2000), then embroiled in the lawsuit purgatory with the film’s producers and on ... ly would be permitted for a limited release 6 years after, MANCHESTER BY THE SEA impacts as a resounding comeback and it is as good as you can get while toiling away with thumping grief and inconsolable guilt. Lee Chandler (Affleck), a building janitor in Boston, he is the dour and withdrawn everyman type who distances himself from rest of the world and occasionally courts unwarranted bar brawl to unleash the smothering anger, so routinely the film will slowly mine into his profoundly buried tale-of-woe which would explain how he has fetched up to the current walking-dead state, and in this case, it is a helluva calamity, the most heart-rending accident could ever happen to a parent, and he has no one but himself to answer for. Receiving the news that his brother Joe (Chandler) died in a sudden heart attack, brings Lee back to his hometown, the titular Manchester-by-the-Sea where flashback adroitly interleaves into the narrative to refresh Lee’s memory (edited with pellucid correlations with what he experiences now) where the concealed secret incubates, and would eventually unfolds in the murky, snow night accompanied by Tomaso Albinoni and Remo Giazotto’s ADAGIO IN G MINOR, a sublime sequence transmits a synesthetic frisson which can knock dead its armchair viewers. In Joe’s will, he names Lee to be the guardian of his son, the 16-year-old high-school jock Patrick (Hedges), which takes Lee aback, a resultant, seemingly life-affirming uncle-nephew bonding process takes its spin sensibly on veracity and wrestles with both Patrick’s suppressed grievance toward his father’s demise (Lee’s heart condition has been long diagnosed, so that it is more like a time-bomb ticking situation), and Lee’s attempt to re-settle in the town on the face of aghast memories and unrelieved penitence, in a pivotal scene, when Lee’s ex-wife Randi (Williams) pleads him for forgiveness and reconciliation after she has been finally capable of moving on to form a new family and embrace a new life, but feels obliged to proffer some extrication for him too, but things are different for the culpable party, not everyone can make peace with the past, however rational it might sound, some pain can be alleviated through time but other stays, thus one must brave himself to live with it for the rest of his life, that is the affirming life-philosophy Lonergan tries to pass on to his audience through studiously delving into the realistic double-bind based on an über-dramatic back-bone, which appears to be an abiding mythos in all his three directorial works to date. Casey Affleck finds his footing in inhabiting Lee with a simmering intensity underneath his alternatively inscrutable/apathetic/distraught veneer, a performance is so aptly up his alley (a combo of hang-dog frustration and whimpering elocution) and to call it the performance of the year wouldn’t be such a stretch. Michelle Williams, shoe-horned in a peripheral role, but manifests herself as a sniveling and imploring scene-stealer just in one scene, she dangles us with immense curiosity about how her character has gone through the catastrophe, but essentially this film is Lee’s story. Lucas Hedges gets a windfall for being cast in a plum role and nominated for an Oscar, which could be a double-edged sword for the future of his budding career, but as credible and affecting as his portrayal is, the credit should mostly given for Lonergan’s well-rounded script of a rather bratty teenager; also Kyle Chandler is virtually next-in-line for a renaissance on the big screen after starring a string of high-caliber Oscar-baits, from ARGO, ZERO DARK THIRTY (both in 2012), to THE WOLF OF WALL STREET (2013), CAROL (2015) and now this, all in small roles but his presence looms larger each time. The cinematography is bracingly crisp and un-showy, a modest production design and an unobtrusive score borrows many classical pieces, MANCHESTER BY THE CITY is a contemplative continuation in the aftermath of a latter-day Greek tragedy, which elevates Lonergan’s status as one of the most outstanding cinematic story-teller currently from USA soil, and one can bet, co-producer Matt Damon must secretly rue the day that he couldn’t commit himself to Casey's role which would have earned him a coveted Oscar statuette as an actor, and in hindsight, his preference to star in Zhang Yimou’s Chinese monster fantasy THE GREAT WALL (2016) now looks like a dumb decision.

Jun 23, 2021
Rangan
8.0

**The life doesn't reflect how we want.** First of all it was not based on any book, but you can see that book kind of effect in the storytelling. One of the best original screenplay, I won't be surprised if it wins the Oscars for that. I actually struggled in the opening to catch the storyline. ... Because the past and present overlapped while sharing the presentation alternatively. But it was about the present with flashbacks popping out regularly to join the tale by comparing/revealing the earlier events. So after few occasions, I got used to it and enjoyed my rest of the watch. I always love good drama films. But not all the drama films I have seen are the masterpiece. So despite it was received so well from all the quarters, I kept my expectations low. The initial parts were okay, but its only during the final stage I begin to like it more. Especially the Casey's performance. I have seen him in many great films, in the big roles, but I think this one is his best, particularly from the positive perspective of the character he had played. Looks like the decade belongs to Affleck brothers. They have given great performances recently and acted in the great films that will be remembered for a long time. This is the story of the Lee, a man who works as a janitor. One day he receives a call that his brother had passed away as he was suffering from the illness for a some time. Since his brother got divorced, all the responsibility comes under his belt, including his teenage son. Now those two struggles to join the force, but somehow manages all. Meanwhile, till the conclusion, the Lee's life before that point were disclosed to us, like how he struggled in his own life before coming to end in the current situation. I could be wrong, but Casey Affleck's going to win the Oscars for his performance. Andrew Garfield is the other guy standing between his chance. I'll be happy whoever wins between them. I like Michelle Williams, but her Oscars nominee is meaningless. What, she appeared for 10-15 minutes in the entire narration which can be tagged as a guest appearance than a full fledged role. This is a fine drama, one of the year's best, deserved all the Oscars nod it got. Surely worth a watch and I recommend it. _8/10_

May 16, 2024
tanty
9.0

Great characters movie. There is little to say about this movie that has not been told yet. The story is simple but interesting and well told. The photography and the location of Manchester-by-the-sea is a very well chosen and the directing is very good. And on top of everything else is its ca ... st. A very well chosen cast that performs at a fantastic level with Casey Affleck delivering one of the most breathtaking performances of the last years. You can feel his pain with every attitude and gesture. The encounter in the street with Michelle Williams is just astonishingly well done while the one at his brother's room after having picked up his things from Boston is a summit on the movie. A very good movie and a very well deserved Oscar.

Jun 23, 2021