Ned (Liev Schreiber) is having a midlife crisis. His job as a writer on an outlandish, semi-pornographic television show leaves much to be desired. His fifteen-year-old son recently informed him that he is gay, and his eleven-year-old is fearful of pretty much everything. When his wife, Jeannie (Helen Hunt), relocates her sick and enraged father (Brian Dennehy) from Detroit to their New York home, the added burden adds to an already difficult marriage. And when Ned is approached by a seductive female coworker (Carla Gugino), the temptation pushes him into a tailspin. EVERY DAY is the story of one family's fight to overcome the unforeseen setbacks that are a natural part of life; age and death; commitment and independence; love and acceptance. It's an unflinching examination of an average family's astonishing journey toward self-discovery and towards one another.
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Ned (Liev Schreiber) is having a midlife crisis. His job as a writer on an outlandish, semi-pornographic television show leaves much to be desired. His fifteen-year-old son recently informed him that he is gay, and his eleven-year-old is fearful of pretty much everything. When his wife, Jeannie (Helen Hunt), relocates her sick and enraged father (Brian Dennehy) from Detroit to their New York home, the added burden adds to an already difficult marriage. And when Ned is approached by a seductive female coworker (Carla Gugino), the temptation pushes him into a tailspin. EVERY DAY is the story of one family's fight to overcome the unforeseen setbacks that are a natural part of life; age and death; commitment and independence; love and acceptance. It's an unflinching examination of an average family's astonishing journey toward self-discovery and towards one another.
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