Movie Background

Sacramento

When the free-spirited Rickey unexpectedly resurfaces in father-to-be Glenn’s life, the two former best friends embark on a spontaneous road trip from Los Angeles to Sacramento.

Director(s)

René Peraza

Spencer Greenwood

J.C. Heins

Cédric Chabloz

Christine W Chen

Cast & Crew

Rosalind Chao

Rosalind Chao

Dr. Murray

Michael Cera

Michael Cera

Glenn

Daniel Edward Mora

Daniel Edward Mora

Bob

Kristen Stewart

Kristen Stewart

Rosie

Michael Angarano

Michael Angarano

Rickey

April Jeanette Mendez

April Jeanette Mendez

Arielle

Bunny Levine

Bunny Levine

Mrs. Krenshaw

Roma Lucero

Roma Lucero

Bar Patron

Mike Hartsfield

Mike Hartsfield

Support Group Mother

Maya Erskine

Maya Erskine

Tallie

Spencer Greenwood

Spencer Greenwood

-

Cédric Chabloz

Cédric Chabloz

-

Amber Riat

Amber Riat

-

Iman Karram

Iman Karram

Jess

Tara R Gokey

Tara R Gokey

Grandmother

Michael Angarano Sr.

Michael Angarano Sr.

-

Shea Gorely

Shea Gorely

Baby Ray

Nora Sczudlo

Nora Sczudlo

Baby Geoff

Leon Angarano

Leon Angarano

Toddler Ray

Stephanie Jackson

Stephanie Jackson

Meter Maid

Sebastian Alexander

Sebastian Alexander

Bartender

Marcus Escobar

Marcus Escobar

Bar Patron

Michael Justin Gonzales

Michael Justin Gonzales

Bar Goer

René Peraza

René Peraza

-

J.C. Heins

J.C. Heins

-

Christine W Chen

Christine W Chen

-

Details

GenresComedy, Drama
Runtime1h 29 mins
Released on11 Apr 2025
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
Advertisement

Reviews

NimaDadashpour

/10

● Anti-Note • Sacramento, directed by Michael Angarano The central issue (or rather, the main flaw) of the film lies in the filmmaker’s claim and motivation surrounding the core theme: the rekindling of a friendship between two old friends. This theme remains frustratingly undeveloped before the third act. By “undeveloped,” I don’t mean the film fails to plant the theme entirely (though that too is debatable), but rather, it’s the way it’s introduced that is problematic. The theme of rekindled friendship gets lost amid the sub-themes: the burdens of adulthood and the fear of facing life’s realities. In fact, from the very beginning and through the character introductions, everything unfolds in an imbalanced and irritating manner. What’s with the repeated shots of Glenn’s nervous breakdown? Is he mentally ill? What kind of marriage is this? Another point: why is the filmmaker’s portrayal of this aspect of marital life—linked to the sub-theme—presented in such a way? Are these people truly in love, or has something been imposed on them? In my view, the women in the film are entirely bodies, not souls—just as the men are essentially children. The two main female characters lack feminine depth, emotion, and decisiveness. They don't even function as proper archetypes. But let’s consider the film visually for a moment. What’s the difference between the single shots and the two-shots? How much independence and identity do they carry? I believe the characters are so underdeveloped and undefined that (almost) no frame successfully constructs the sense of a friendship—especially an old one. The images, like the characters themselves, lie. The relationships are blatantly unbelievable and artificial. Even the concern over having a child feels hollow. In reality, none of the film’s themes ever reach the point where the story and characters could genuinely be built around them.

All Trailers

Official Trailer
Advertisement