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  1. Apr 8, 2010 · Multiple Sarcasms: Directed by Brooks Branch. With Timothy Hutton, Mira Sorvino, Dana Delany, Mario Van Peebles. NYC, 1979: Gabriel and Annie's marriage is falling apart with only their daughter holding it together.

    • (723)
    • Comedy, Drama, Romance
    • Brooks Branch
    • 2010-04-08
  2. Multiple Sarcasms is a 2010 American drama film starring Timothy Hutton, Mira Sorvino, Stockard Channing, Dana Delany and Mario Van Peebles. It was sold at the European Film Market on February 6, 2009 and was released in the United States May 7, 2010.

  3. 2010 · 1 hr 38 min. R. Drama. Set in 1979 New York City, an accomplished but unfulfilled architect lives out his midlife crisis by rewriting his life as a play. Subtitles: English. Starring: Timothy Hutton Mira Sorvino Dana Delany Mario Van Peebles Stockard Channing. Directed by: Brooks Branch.

    • Brooks Branch
    • January 1, 2010
    • 98 min
  4. May 7, 2010 · Gabriel is a man who on the surface has it all-successful professional life as an architect, a beautiful wife, Annie, and a devoted young daughter, Elizabeth. But slowly it dawns on him that he is not really happy. Gabriel decides that he wants to write a play about the sorry state of his life.

  5. Multiple Sarcasms. DRAMA. Gabriel Richmond has it all – a great career, a devoted best friend and a loving wife and daughter – then why is he so miserable? Witty, probing and emotionally honest, MULTIPLE SARCASMS is an average guy’s search for what’s missing from his “perfect” life.

    • Brooks Branch
    • Timothy Hutton, Mira Sorvino, Dana Delany
  6. Page 1 of 6, 11 total items. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. Gabriel (Timothy Hutton) is a successful architect but, one day, realizes that he hates his life; he quits his job to write a play, a ...

    • (22)
    • Drama
    • R
  7. It's New York, 1979. Gabriel Richmond is a talented architect with a seemingly rich life as he has a caring wife, loving daughter and life long friends. Yet, he spends most days in the movie theater, hiding out from work, escaping into a fictional world where he can more readily relate to the made.