Hudson Milbank is a successful Hollywood screenwriter who suddenly and strangely finds himself without any emotional feelings. He tries doctor after doctor and shrink after shrink, but nothing works. The Golf Channel, lesbian exercise classes and a dizzying variety of pills get him through the day, but don't quite solve his problem. His writing partner tries everything to get him back to normal, but it's not until Hudson meets Sara that he finds a real motivation to get better and to actually start feeling again. From the writer of Deuce Bigalow, comes NUMB, a romantic comedy following an unusual man looking for strange love.
Directed by Harris Goldberg
Trailer
IMDB
N/A
Letterboxd
3.2 / 5
Cast
Matthew Perry
Hudson Milbank
Lynn Collins
Sara Harrison
Kevin Pollak
Tom
Bob Gunton
Dr. Townshend
Helen Shaver
Audrey Milbank
William B. Davis
Peter Milbank
Mary Steenburgen
Dr. Blaine
Ben Immanuel
Stan Milbank
Noah Dalton Danby
Tim
Monique Ganderton
Debra
Mark Acheson
Homeless Guy
Patricia Harras
Dr. Simon
Crew
Eric Steelberg
Director of Photography
Kirk Shaw
Producer
Lindsay MacAdam
Co-Producer
Owen Walstrom
Stunt Coordinator
Steven McMichael
Stunt Coordinator
Garvin Cross
Stunt Driver
Popular Reviews
7 reviews
Zea MoorePRO
8.0★ · 11/13/25
idc i Thought it was good
idc i Thought it was good
Rocky
10.0★ · 02/12/24
One day you'll wake up and it'll be alright
One day you'll wake up and it'll be alright
Jules
8.0★ · 11/16/23
Literalmente yo, yo, yo, soy yo, yo literal, yo, yo, yo
Literalmente yo, yo, yo, soy yo, yo literal, yo, yo, yo
Lucien WD
6.0★ · 11/04/23
This is like a movie I would've conceived of when i was 16 and I thought there was nothing more interesting than the suffering of rich middle-aged men. Nevertheless-- extremely watchable, mostly because Perry is in every frame of it. I never got on board with Lynn Collins and I'm sorta glad she stopped getting work- sorry if she is reading this.
This is like a movie I would've conceived of when i was 16 and I thought there was nothing more interesting than the suffering of rich middle-aged men. Nevertheless-- extremely watchable, mostly because Perry is in every frame of it. I never got on board with Lynn Collins and I'm sorta glad she stopped getting work- sorry if she is reading this.