Frances Ha (2013)

Released: 2013-05-17 Recommended age: 17+ IMDb 7.4
Frances Ha

Movie details

  • Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Director: Noah Baumbach
  • Main cast: Greta Gerwig, Mickey Sumner, Michael Zegen, Adam Driver, Charlotte d'Amboise
  • Country / region: Brazil, United States of America
  • Original language: en
  • Premiere: 2013-05-17

Story overview

Frances Ha is a 2013 comedy-drama film that follows Frances, a 27-year-old aspiring dancer in New York City, as she navigates the challenges of adulthood, friendship, and career aspirations. The movie explores themes of personal growth, changing relationships, and the search for identity through Frances's quirky and often humorous experiences. Shot in black and white, it captures the bittersweet moments of young adulthood with a realistic and heartfelt tone.

Parent Guide

An R-rated comedy-drama about a young woman's journey through adulthood with mature themes and language.

Content breakdown

Violence & peril
None

No physical violence or perilous situations.

Scary / disturbing
None

No frightening or disturbing content.

Language
Strong

Contains strong profanity and sexual references throughout.

Sexual content & nudity
Mild

Contains discussions about sexual relationships and adult situations.

Substance use
Mild

Social drinking in adult settings.

Emotional intensity
Moderate

Explores adult themes of disappointment, friendship changes, and personal growth.

Parent tips

Frances Ha is rated R primarily for language, including strong profanity and sexual references throughout the film. The movie contains mature themes about adult relationships, career struggles, and personal identity that may be difficult for younger viewers to understand. Parents should be aware that while there are no graphic scenes of violence or explicit sexual content, the dialogue includes frank discussions about adult situations and relationships.

Parent chat guide

This film provides opportunities to discuss friendship dynamics, career aspirations, and the transition to adulthood. You might talk about how Frances handles disappointment and maintains her optimism despite setbacks. The movie also raises questions about personal identity and how people define success in their lives.

Parent follow-up questions

  • What did you think about Frances's dancing?
  • How did Frances feel when she was with her friends?
  • What was your favorite part of the movie?
  • Why do you think Frances wanted to be a dancer?
  • How did Frances's friendships change throughout the movie?
  • What did Frances learn about herself by the end?
  • How does Frances handle disappointment when things don't go her way?
  • What does the movie show about the challenges of growing up?
  • Why do you think the film was shot in black and white?
  • How does Frances's journey reflect real challenges young adults face?
  • What does the film say about balancing dreams with practical realities?
  • How do the relationships in the movie evolve as characters mature?
⚠️ Deep Film Analysis (Contains Spoilers) · Click to Expand
A black-and-white portrait of millennial drift where the real drama unfolds in the spaces between ambitions.

🎭 Story Kernel

Frances Ha is less about achieving dreams than about learning to inhabit the awkward, unglamorous space between aspirations and reality. Frances's journey isn't a linear rise but a lateral shuffle—from her best friend's couch to a disastrous Paris trip to a mundane office job. The film captures the specific anxiety of being 27 with the cultural markers of adulthood (career, apartment, partner) stubbornly out of reach. Her driving force isn't ambition but a desperate, often clumsy, desire for connection and a fear of being left behind as her peers 'settle down.' The real resolution isn't a big break but a quiet, hard-won acceptance of a smaller, more authentic life.

🎬 Visual Aesthetics

Shot in crisp, high-contrast black and white on digital, the film evokes French New Wave photography while grounding it in gritty New York realism. The camera is often handheld, following Frances with a restless, intimate energy that mirrors her own. Long, unbroken takes—like her sprint-dance down the street to 'Modern Love'—capture bursts of pure, unfiltered joy. The monochrome palette strips away distraction, focusing on texture, movement, and the architecture of her transient spaces. It visually argues that her world isn't devoid of color, but is instead one of stark choices and clear-eyed, if painful, self-assessment.

🔍 Details & Easter Eggs

1
The recurring motif of Frances running—to catch a cab, through streets, in dance—visually embodies her frantic, directionless energy and the constant, exhausting performance of 'keeping up.'
2
Her last name, 'Ha,' is never explained but hangs like an unfinished laugh or sigh, reflecting her character's suspended state between comedy and melancholy.
3
In the final scene, Frances finally gets her name on the mailbox. It's a tiny, bureaucratic victory that symbolizes her fragile, hard-earned claim to a stable identity and place in the world.

💡 Behind the Scenes

The film was shot on a Canon 5D Mark II, a consumer-grade DSLR, giving it an accessible, immediate quality. Much of the dialogue was improvised from loose outlines by Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig, who also co-wrote the story. Gerwig's own experiences as a struggling artist in New York heavily informed Frances's character. The iconic 'Modern Love' sprint was filmed in one take on a New York street with minimal crew, capturing a spontaneous, euphoric moment that defines the character's resilient spirit.

Where to watch

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  • Netflix
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  • Criterion Channel
  • Philo
  • Tubi TV
  • Amazon Video
  • Apple TV
  • Google Play Movies
  • YouTube
  • Fandango At Home

Trailer

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