This Is Where I Leave You (FILM REVIEW)
This Is Where I Leave You
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Family Grieves Patriarch in Droll Dramedy Based on Best
Seller
When Mort
Altman (Will Swenson) passes away, his children return home reasonably expecting
to remain in town briefly. After all, despite being raised Jewish, they have no
reason to expect to sit shiva, since their dad was an avowed atheist and their psychologist
mom (Jane Fonda) is a gentile.
However, after
the funeral, Hillary Altman informs her offspring of the dearly-departed’s
dying wish that they mourn him for a week in accordance with religious
tradition. And then, she announces that they’ve all just been grounded for
seven days, as if they’re still children.
This development
doesn’t sit well with any of the siblings, since they don’t get along and this
is the first time they’ve all been sleeping under the same roof in ages.
Furthermore, their dad’s death couldn’t have come at a more inopportune moment,
since each is in the midst of a midlife crisis.
Judd (Jason Bateman)
has just learned that his wife (Abigail Spencer) is having an affair with his
boss (Dax Shepard). Meanwhile, brother Paul’s (Corey Stoll) marriage is in jeopardy
because his wife’s (Kathryn Hahn) biological clock is ticking very loudly but
she’s been unable to get pregnant.
Then there’s playboy
baby brother, Philip (Adam Driver), a narcissist with unresolved oedipal
issues, judging by the fact that he’s dating a shrink (Connie Britton) old
enough to be his mother. He’s such a self-indulgent womanizer, he doesn’t think
twice about shamelessly flirting with an old flame (Carly Brooke Pearlstein)
right in front of his mortified girlfriend.
Finally, we have only-sister
Wendy (Tina Fey). Superficially, she seems to be the most stable of the four as
a doting mother of two with a devoted, if emotionally distant, husband (Aaron
Lazar) who at least is a great provider.
Barry’s obsession
with his career on Wall Street has come at the cost of preserving the passion
and intimacy in the relationship. So, the last thing Wendy needs now is the temptation
of a duplicitous dalliance being dangled in front of her eyes in the form of Horry
(Timothy Olyphant). However, her hunky high school sweetheart is still single,
still in shape, and still right across the street, even if he’s brain-damaged
and lives with his mother (Debra Monk).
All of these sticky situations serve primarily
as fodder for a sophisticated brand of humor in This
Is Where I Leave You, an alternately droll and laugh out loud dramedy
directed by Shawn Levy (Date Night). Adroitly adapted to the screen by Jonathan
Tropper, author of the best seller of the same name, this relentlessly-witty film features some of the
funniest repartee around as it simultaneously explores a laundry list of
sobering themes ranging from religion and mortality to love and betrayal.
A
character-driven examination of a dysfunctional Jewish family about as wacky as
they come.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated R
for profanity, sexuality and drug use
Running time: 103
minutes
Distributor: Warner
Brothers
To see a trailer for This
Is Where I Leave You, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fH0cEP0mvlU
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