You are here
Home > MOVIES/TV > The Lonely Crowd review by Robert E. Moore

The Lonely Crowd review by Robert E. Moore

Online dating can be a real killer.

In the new romantic thriller ‘The Lonely Crowd’ by debut writer/director David St. Clair; it really can be.

The film centers on Peter (Adam Wesley), a jaded ex-athlete looking for the right girl in the lonely concrete jungle of Los Angeles. Seeing only his close friends finding happiness, he almost gives up on love when he meets the spiky Ashley (Taylor Anne Danehower) online and they agree to meet on a tense, fateful first date that ends up being anything other than conventional. Turns out the sultry Ashley is mixed up with some super shady people and soon Peter is caught up in all of it including her unhinged ex-cop boyfriend, Jake (a miscast Giancarlo Carmona).

 

Peter and Ashely must put aside their differences as they now become fugitives on the run in a desperate race to prove their innocence and uncover Jake’s illegal web of police corruption and murder.

St. Clair attempts ambition and blends romance, thriller and comedy (along with the pitfalls of online dating apps) into one but can’t find connection (pun intended) with any of them. The drab, digital visuals of the film don’t help and yes, the story is set in LA but all the male characters look like models and have perfect eybrows and lack the grit of supposed experienced cops or ex-cons: the film just doesn’t seem as lived in or as real as the script demands it to be. The opening segment however, nicely sets up the film with a daring prison escape but as soon as we switch the narrative to Peter the story almost seems like it’s from a different film entirely.

The lack of chemistry between the two leads doesn’t help (although Danehower comes across much better than the banal Wesley) and the dialogue tries to be clever and witty but ends up stuck with cheesy one-liners such as “heads up, jerk off” that seem more suited to a movie starring Dwayne Johnson. Ironically, a large rock becomes the main protagonist of the film’s climax which sums up the film in general.

At 105 minutes the film also suffers from glacial pacing depsite the promise of high stakes.

Swipe left on this one folks.

Desario Films, USA, 105 Mins, 2026.

The Lonely Crowd is available to rent/buy on Amazon Prime.

Robert Moore
Robert was born and raised in England for most of his youth but relocated with his family to California where he began his dream of becoming a filmmaker. He soon made his way to New York City where he majored in film production at Brooklyn College and his short films won several awards and travelled to festivals in both New York and LA. He soon made his way back to LA where he worked on several TV and film productions on the major Hollywood studio lots. Robert later transitioned to becoming a writer full time and is currently developing several of his own feature scripts and a documentary. He lives in West Hollywood with his fiancée and puppy.

One thought on “The Lonely Crowd review by Robert E. Moore

  1. Does this reviewer like anything? I read six of his reviews, and all he does is bash indie/micro-budget films. He likes to make up cute little phrases and (in the case of this film review, a pun that is intended!), and make the review about himself. Also, his criticisms are so short that his bio is longer than most of his reviews! That says a lot. Lol.

    His bio says he worked on a movie, but I can’t find anything he’s done. Guess he just likes to sit back and trash other people’s hard work; typical, hack critic.

    The audience needs to stick to IMDb and Letterboxd. Critics are relics that need to go find day jobs.

Leave a Reply

Top