Nic and Junes are a married lesbian couple living with their two children in Los Angeles. The children want to find their biological father and want him to join their family after being impressed by his lifestyle. The three parents, Nic, Junes and Paul, compete with each other to effect their children decisions.
Sophisticated and funny, but once you get past the unusual premise and the fact that the main couple is realistically portrayed, there's nothing surprising about it.
Definitions of family, love and friendship all get put to the test with wit and warmth in The Kids Are All Right, one of the year's most honest and endearing films.
The dialog seems like it was pulled from a magazine full of bad liberal clichés. It feels as if people who used to be progressives, but want people to think they still are wrote this movie.