Amy Stiller, Anne Meara, Apple TV Plus, Ben Stiller, Christine Taylor, Dawn Eaton, documentaries, Doreen Stiller, Ella Stiller, film festivals, Jerry Stiller, John Guare, movies, New York Film Festival, Quinlin Stiller, reviews, Stiller and Meara: Nothing Is Lost, TV
October 5, 2025
by Carla Hay

“Stiller and Meara: Nothing Is Lost”
Directed by Ben Stiller
Culture Representation: The documentary film “Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost” features an all-white group of people who are connected in some way to American entertainer spouses Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara.
Culture Clash: Stiller and Meara, who came from different backgrounds (his family was Polish Jewish, her family was Irish Catholic), overcame obstacles in their careers and personal lives to become successful entertainers during their 61-year marriage.
Culture Audience: “Stiller and Meara: Nothing Is Lost” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the Stiller family of entertainers and celebrity documentaries that are told from the perspectives of family members.

“Stiller and Meara: Nothing Is Lost” is the cinematic equivalent of looking at someone’s family photo albums, watching family home videos, and hearing family stories. This documentary is exactly what it appears to be: a loving tribute to Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, directed by their son, Ben Stiller. It’s a not groundbreaking film, but it nicely demonstrates themes of love, loyalty and legacy. At times, the movie almost detours into a Ben Stiller biography, but it generally stays on track and achieves its purpose of giving an up-close-and-personal look at the matriarch and patriarch in this longtime successful showbiz family.
“Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost”(which had its world premiere at the 2025 New York Film Festival) follows a conventional format of mixing archive footage with footage filmed exclusively for the documentary. Ben Stiller (who is a famous entertainer in his own right) gives insightful narration, as he puts the documentary in a setting of himself and his older sister Amy Stiller sifting through their parents’ belongings in a New York City apartment. Meara died in 2015, at age 85. Jerry Stiller died in 2020, at age 92.
The movie has an intimate tone because most of the people interviewed for the documentary are family members. In addition to featuring conversations with Ben and Amy, the documentary shows separate conversations that Ben with his actress wife, Christine Taylor, and their two children: Ella (born in 2002) and Quinlin (born in 2005). Also interviewed are Jerry’s sister Doreen Stiller; Dawn Eaton, a longtime associate of the Stiller family; and playwright John Guare, whose original 1971 off-Broadway production of “House of Blue Leaves” starred Meara.
The documentary chronicles what is already publicly known, such as how Meara and Jerry met in 1953, and fell in love in their hometown of New York City; how they got married in 1954, and became a famous comedic duo; and the end of their comedy duo act and what projects the spouses did separately. They were truly a case of opposites attract: He was from a Polish Jewish family and was neurotically insecure about his talent. She was from an Irish Catholic family and was the “life of the party.” He started his entertainment career doing mostly comedy. She came from a serious drama background in theater.
According to Ben, Jerry would be the type of entertainer who would diligently over-rehearse, while Meara was comfortable with improvisation. Jerry thought that Meara was more talented than he was, so he felt like he had to work harder. It’s mentioned several times in the documentary that the couple’s on-stage interactions were reflections of their off-stage relationship. Meara was the more outspoken partner who would often take the lead in conversations, while Jerry tended to be more deferential.
The documentary also includes discussion of the childhoods of Jerry and Meara. Jerry’s father Willie (who was a driver of taxis and buses) was a wannabe actor who attempted to make a career out of it but never made it. In an audio archival interview, Willie said he gave up acting because he had to have a job “to make ends meet.” Willie passed on his love of entertainment to Jerry, who graduated from Syracuse University in 1950 with a bachelor’s degree in speech and drama.
By all accounts, Meara (who had no siblings) had a family who did not expect her to work in showbiz. Meara’s path to becoming an entertainer started in 1947, when she took acting classes at the New School in New York City. Meara’s father Edward was an attorney, and she was deeply affected by her mother Mary’s suicide, which happened when Anne was 11 years old.
It’s hinted that this childhood trauma, which Anne did not like to discuss, could have led to her adult problem of alcohol abuse, which she was able to overcome with Jerry’s help. The movie gives some insight into how this drinking problem negatively affected her marriage and other relationships, However, you get the feeling that there was a lot more that happened concerning the alcohol abuse that was deliberately kept out of the documentary.
The documentary also shows that Jerry was the “pack rat”/family archivist. While sifting through boxes of his parents’ possessions, Ben marvels, “It’s insane what he kept.” (Some of the memorabilia includes admission tickets to places where the family went to in the 1960s and 1970s.) Jerry also kept articles about the family. One of the best parts of the documentary is when Ben reads excepts from a few of his parents’ love letters to each other.
“Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost” would be remiss if it didn’t talk about the influence that this famous couple had on their children. Ben and Amy both share fond childhood memories of being encouraged to create characters and do skits. Ben says he became influenced to become a filmmaker when his father got him a Super 8 camera when Ben was a child.
In the documentary, Ben and Amy both say that their parents like to work on their comedy material behind closed doors and didn’t like to be disturbed when working. However, what made it into the comedy act was often dialogue that Ben and Amy say came from real-life conversations that their parents had. There are several clips in the documentary showing Amy and Ben being interviewed on TV with their parents, who clearly did not discourage their children from being in the spotlight.
Although Ben and Amy tell similar stories of their own childhoods, the documentary admirably shows how two siblings who grew up in the same family can also tell a story in two different ways. Ben says that when he decided to become a professional entertainer, he felt that his parents’ fame cast a long shadow, and he was determined to prove he could make it on his own. But then, Amy chimes in and reminds Ben that Ben always put either or both of their parents in almost every film or sketch he did early in his career.
The movie includes archival footage of Jerry and Anne in Ben’s audition video for “Saturday Night Live.” Ben had a short-lived stint on “Saturday Night Live” as a featured player during show’s 14th season in 1989. Ben’s big comedy series breakthrough was on “The Ben Stiller Show,” which was on the air from 1990 to 1995. The documentary also includes archival clips of Anne and Jerry on “The Ben Stiller Show.”
Ben describes his parents as loving, but his mother was harder to please. Even though Jerry and Anne were most famous for comedy, Ben says his mother still had a drama snob mentality for most of her life. She maintained an opinion that if entertainment has a hierarchy, then comedy is on the lower level. Viewers might be surprised to learn that although Ben might have benefited from being a “nepo baby,” Ben says his mother didn’t really encourage or fully approve of the comedy films that he became famous for, such as 1998’s “There’s Something About Mary” or 2000’s “Meet the Parents.” Anne liked it when Ben did a more “serious” movie like 1998’s “Permanent Midnight” or 2010’s “Greenberg.”
At times, “Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost” gets a little too wrapped up in Ben’s perspective. For example, there’s a sequence that shows Jerry and Anne doing their comedy act on a breakthrough 1963 appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” intercut with footage of Ben appearing at the Ed Sullivan Theatre in New York City for an appearance on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.” It’s meant to show how aspects of Ben’s life are continuations or parallels of his parents’ lives. However, it comes across as a bit self-indulgent because viewers are smart enough to already know that Ben has made public appearances at many of the same places that his parents did.
Despite a few missteps where the documentary’s tone veers into “enough about Jerry and Anne, here’s more about Ben,” the documentary benefits from Ben’s candor when he talks about his motivation for doing the documentary. Ben says that after his father died in 2020, Ben confesses that he felt “unhappy,” “out of balance” and “a little lost.” Having experienced a separation and reconciliation in his own marriage, Ben set out to make a documentary about his parents and their long-term marriage. “I wanted to understand how they did it.”
“Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost” is about more than a marriage that survived the perils of showbiz. It’s a crowd-pleasing story about a family that is undoubtedly influenced by two people who paved the family’s way in the entertainment industry but also held the family together when so many others fall apart in similar circumstances. The message of the documentary is having an emotionally healthy and supportive family is an accomplishment and a privilege that matters so much more than fame and fortune.
Apple Studios will release “Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost” in select U.S. cinemas on October 17, 2025. The movie will premiere on Apple TV+ on October 24, 2025.
