THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU review by Gary Murray

THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU review by Gary Murray

thisiswhereileaveyou-poster

Death has always been a part of cinematic comedy almost from the genre’s inception. The oldest theorem of comedy states that comedy equals tragedy plus time. Death at a Funeral both the US and UK versions are two recent examples of this kind of big screen humor. The latest film about dealing with aftermath of demise is This Is Where I Leave You.

Jason Bateman plays Judd, a man who has been living out a very bad existence. As a guy who doesn’t do complicated, he works for a shock jock (Dax Shepard) and has a beautiful wife Quinn (Abigail Spencer). Judd walks in on his boss and his wife having sex. Then he gets the phone call that his dad died.

It is a family that is not very close and has scattered to the four winds. Mom (Jane Fonda) insists that all the kids fulfill his last wish, to sit Shiva. The Jewish concept of Shiva means that for a week the immediate family sits and receives visitors in the family home. It is a time of reflection and honoring the dead.

Years ago, Mom had written an international best-seller about her family. It is the thing that started driving the wedge between all the different members of the clan. Mom has no qualms about sex and discussing her romantic hi-jinks with her husband in their younger days.

Judd has an older brother Paul (Corey Stoll) and kid sister Wendy (Tina Fey). Paul is married to Judd’s old flame Alice (Kathryn Hahn) and Alice and Paul are trying to conceive their first child. Wendy has a marriage on the rocks and pines for her neighbor who is the victim of a tragedy. Added to the mix is wayward youngest son Phillip (Adam Driver) who brings his much older girlfriend to the homestead.

During the seven days, Judd keeps running into another old flame named Penny (Rose Byrne). She is a skater who came back home to care for her aged mother and just stayed. There is this definite spark still smoldering between the two. It is another complication in Judd’s life.

The more the family sits around mourning, the further the tensions rise. In order to keep the screenplay chugging along, more and more twists are added into the mix. It seems that everyone has a problem and everyone has a secret. The world of This Is Where I Leave You is a world where no one is happy.

By the time we get to the end, all the surprises are just that bit too much. As the film spools along, more and more the willing suspension of disbelief is weakened. Before the last act, this suspension snaps under its own weight. Parts of the experience do feel honest. The needling of the brothers is the single truest beat of the production and those are the most telling moments. But as writer Jonathan Tropper tries to build on his base, he goes into sitcom mode, taking element after element and never exploring the meaning behind them. Director Shawn Levy tries to blend comedy and pathos within the same scenes and succeeds about 50% of the time. He has some great comic actors in his cast but fails to really let them loose on the material. The restrain almost kills the impact.

The casting of This Is Where I Leave You is brilliant. Jason Bateman plays the sad sack much in the same way of classic Hollywood actors. His moping eyes and put-upon stare work great for the role. But the more you watch this mess of a man, the more one wonders how he can land so many different beautiful women.

Tina Fey is a great comic but with this role she proves that she can be a great actress. There are truly heartfelt moments between her and Jason Bateman where the emotions ring true. She is a woman caught in a life she didn’t expect and didn’t plan. Jane Fonda still looks great as the aged mother of this clan. She still has strong comedy chops and can deliver a punchline as well as the seasoned comics in other roles. It is great to see her back on the big screen and she’s not afraid to show her aging.

This Is Where I Leave You is much more humorous comedy than laugh out loud giggle-fest. It is a tale of love and death and how they are tied together. The film is about reflection and rebirth of family ties. It does seem to drag here and there but it entertains on a consistent but low level. All together is a mediocre film with a stunning cast.

Be Sociable, Share!

About the Author

Born and raised in Dallas, Mark has been a movie critic since 1994, with reviews featured in print, radio and National TV. In 2001 he started the Entertainment section of the Herorealm website, where he contributed film reviews and celebrity interviews until 2004. After three years of service there, he started Bigfanboy.com, which has become one of the Dallas film community's leading information websites. Bigfanboy hosts several movie screenings in the Texas area, and works closely with film and TV studios and promotional partners to host exciting events and contests. The site also features a variety of rare celebrity and filmmaker interviews, and Bigfanboy.com regularly covers the film festival circuit as well. In addition to Hollywood reporting, Mark has worked for many years as an advertising and sci-fi/comic book artist. Clients have included Lucasfilm Ltd., Topps Trading Cards, The Dallas Mavericks and The Dallas Stars. From 2002 until 2015 he managed the Dallas Comic Con, Sci-Fi Expo and Fan Days events in the DFW area. He currently catalogs rare comic books and movie memorabilia for Heritage Auctions, and runs the Dallas Comic Show conventions, but remains an avid moviegoer and cinema buff.