Looking For Kitty is not only Burns' shortest film running
time wise but also his most overlooked by a mile.
What makes this one special is the chemistry and
performances of Krumholtz and Burns. They're great
together and Krumholtz is in the zone, it's a simple
story about a guy who hires a PI to help him find
his estranged wife but also wants to work side by
side with Burns while they search. Give this one a
chance, it's 75 minutes of comedy and sweetness.
Review: ‘Looking for Kitty’
Prolific writer-director Edward Burns' "Looking for Kitty" represents a return of sorts to the pared-down, low-budget roots of his debut, "The Brothers McMullan." Mellow chronicle of the friendship between two lonely men thrown together on a mission is still naggingly thin and unlikely to withstand much theatrical scrutiny.
Looking for Kitty - Review - Movies
The loss of two women sparks an unlikely bond between strangers in "Looking for Kitty," the writer-director-actor Edward Burns's latest exercise in maleness. Abe (David Krumholtz, who is first-rate), an impossibly rigid but kindhearted high school baseball coach from upstate, travels to Manhattan in search of his wife, who may or may not be shacking up with a geeky rock star.
The Horror!!