‘Our Friend’ is an opportunity for a good cry — if wanted

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NEW YORK (AP) — If his new movie, " Our Friend, " makes audiences cry, Jason Segal can
sympathize.
He recalls being on an airplane and watching a movie that made him break down so uncontrollably that it
got the attention of a woman seated next to him.
"I was weeping, full-on weeping, crying so hard, and this woman couldn’t resist trying to find out
what I was crying at. And she, like, peeked over and it was ‘Dreamgirls.’ This grown man, bawling his
eyes out to ‘Dreamgirls,’" the actor said, laughing, in a recent interview.
"Our Friend," premiering Friday in theaters and video on demand platforms, certainly covers
emotional territory. Segal plays Dane, the best friend of married couple Matt and Nicole (played by
Casey Affleck and Dakota Johnson). When Nicole is diagnosed with terminal cancer, Dane moves in with the
family to help them during the time she has left.
It’s based on the true story of an experience written about by journalist Matthew Teague in 2015 for
Esquire. He wanted to write about what going through a death is really like.
"I felt so unprepared to meet death, even caring for somebody who was dying and that I felt even
almost betrayed by the culture. In a way, I feel like we don’t discuss this very openly or very
honestly," said Teague.
Production on the film wrapped before the pandemic but Affleck understands it will strike a chord with
viewers about grief and loss.
"I think a lot of movies are probably going to be seen through the lens of the experience that we’ve
all shared over the last year, whether or not they were intended to be about those things," said
Affleck.
Johnson hopes the movie will remind others to "feel a bit more grateful and a bit more compassionate
with themselves and others."
From experiencing his own loss, Teague offers advice on what to say to those who know someone who is
going through it.
"It’s hard to know what to say. And I think sometimes the best thing you can do is just be there and
just offer yourself in some way and to not expect some emotional reaction. Even now, years have passed.
I’ll still be in a restaurant and someone will come up and say, you know, ‘I’m so sorry for your loss.’
And I feel like there’s an expectation that I reciprocate emotionally in some way. And so something I
learned is just let people grieve on their own terms."
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Follow Alicia Rancilio online at http://www.twitter.com/aliciar

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