7/10
Character-driven low-budget movie that works...to a point
8 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Quite glad I took the time to watch this. The surface premise is quite light - two Canadian brothers with some issues to work out drive around Los Angeles County for a day looking for one of them's ex-girlfriend. As the day progresses first some of the deeper tensions emerge, the driver, elder brother Michael (Adam Scott)is a writer suffering some kind of writer's block on his second book and it's his 37th birthday, while the searcher, Tobey (Joel Bisonette)is a recovering addict who appears to have betrayed family trust in the past. The dialogue between the two leads is realistically the type of deprecatory, disparaging code often used between rival siblings, containing itself below the level of anger because along with the dearth of trust there is an accompanying freedom of communication. It will obviously be a bad day when these two do not understand each other and this is not that day. It becomes clear after a while that there is a mutual help process in action, that they are clearing life paths for one another and re-assessing their relationship and previous perceptions of abandonment.

Scott and Bisonette pull off the difficult dialogue effortlessly and and create engaging characters. Scott has the best of it as his driving task begins to open up for him a world around him that he doesn't seem to have been conscious of before - his first book had been based on the relationships among his family members "only made much worse, because that's what people want to read" and there's a sense that the day's experience will be good for him creatively. Bisonette plays the dark horse with the past, streetwise and possibly fearless in a kind of Stanley Cup way, ie not always involving a great deal of obvious intelligence, with enough pathos and uncertainty to convince as the recovering addict who doesn't really believe in programmes as much as (certain) people.

The anticlimactic dènoument can be seen far away without much difficulty but is anyway less immediately important than the bonding between the brothers. Unlikely to change the way you look at cinema or satisfy any hunger for action/suspense but scoring quite high on feelgood factor.
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