Hector and the Search for Happiness (FILM REVIEW)
Hector and the Search for Happiness
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Rollicking Road Comedy Chronicles Eccentric Shrink’s Crazy Quest for Joy
Hector (Simon Pegg) is a funny duck,
as they say. The eccentric neat freak is lucky to have a gorgeous girlfriend
like Clara (Rosamund Pike) who’s willing to put up with his odd requests, such
as arranging everything in perfect order, from his socks to his sandwiches.
He’s even more fortunate to have a thriving psychiatric practice, given the barely-contained
contempt he routinely exhibits for the folks lying on his couch.
A moment of truth arrives the day one of them (Veronica Ferres)
finally summons up the courage to tell him to his face that he’s transparent,
inauthentic, and just going through the motions. Conceding that he’s become so
jaded that he isn’t helping his equally-miserable patients anymore, Hector
decides to embark solo on a globe-spanning, spiritual quest for the fulfillment
that has somehow escaped him.
After all, how could he not have joy, when surrounded by all the
trappings of success? Hector’s plans have Clara concerned about whether the
relationship is on shaky ground, since she’s been reluctant to start a family and
she’s also aware that he has an ex (Toni Collette) in the U.S. he still cares
about.
Unfolding like the alpha male answer to Eat Pray Love (2010), Hector and the Search for Happiness is an alternately introspective and action-oriented travelogue played
mostly for laughs. Simon Pegg exhibits an endlessly-endearing naïvete as the peripatetic
protagonist, whether misreading the flirtations of a prostitute (Ming
Zhao) in China
or taking a while to realize that his cab has been carjacked by the underlings
of an African crime boss (Akin Omotoso).
Such perils
notwithstanding, our intrepid hero persists in posing his pressing question “What is happiness?” at each
port-of-call as he circumnavigates the globe. Taking copious notes on a writing
pad, he records the answers he receives, like “Being loved for who you are,” “Answering
your calling,” and “Feeling completely alive.”
Eventually,
Hector experiences that elusive “Eureka!”
epiphany he needs so dearly, which allows him to rush home revitalized to Clara
and a career and clients who might not be so annoying after all. A feel-good meditation
on the meaning of life, guaranteed to leave you counting your many blessings as
you walk up the aisle.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated
R for profanity and brief nudity
In English, French and German with subtitles
Running time: 114
minutes
Distributor: Relativity
Media
To see a trailer for Hector and the Search for Happiness,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2mgTYdth0w
No comments:
Post a Comment