Daily Times (Primos, PA)

So-so soiree

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Dan

He follows that lovely reminder up a few minutes later — as the pair has just begun to drive away from the house and Deanna is looking back and tearing up as Maddie hugs her friends — with the declaratio­n that he wants a divorce. He’s been having affair with a real estate agent, and the marriage is over, he says.

After a talk with her parents (Stephen Root and Jackie Weaver, an Oscar nominee for “Silver Linings Playbook”), she decides she will return to nearby Decatur University to finish her archeology studies. The look Maddie gives her mother upon being told they’ll soon be at college together is perfect.

“This is … good news,” Maddie says, clearly not buying her own words.

After a binge at the bookstore for school-spirit gear, Deanna wakes in her dorm room before classes start.

“First day of

(She soon proceeds to then yell, “Go Tigers!” to other students on the campus.)

While her roommate, Leonor (Heidi Gardner of “Saturday Night Live”), is an odd, live-life-in-thedark type, Deanna immediatel­y hits it off with her daughter’s sorority sisters Amanda (Adria Arjona, “Pacific Rim: Uprising”), Debbie (Jessie Ennis, “Better Call Saul”) and Helen (Gillian Jacobs, “Community,” “Love”). It doesn’t hurt that she becomes a pseudo mom to them, listening to their troubles and making them food.

She bonds the most with Helen, who has a few years on the other girls after being in a lengthy coma, an event that has made her a bit of a star on social media. (The fact that she has a huge number of followers allows for a late-story plot developmen­t involving a celebrity.)

Deanna also finds a rival in the pretty-and-bratty Jennifer (Debby Ryan, “Rip Tide”), another weak plot element, this one to generate says. “You didn’t school!” graduate.” she pronounces. occasional conflict — and a danceoff at a 1980s-themed party.

Speaking of parties, at an earlier bash at a fraternity house, Deanna is given a quick makeover by Maddie in the bathroom, indulges in some binge drinking and spends the night with a young man, Jack (Luke Bernard, “Still the King”). One of the movie’s nicest sequences involving mother and daughter taking “the walk of shame” together the next morning, in which Deanna is clearly oblivious to how much she is oversharin­g with Maddie.

Of course, it makes little sense that the handsome, kind-hearted Jack becomes obsessed with Deanna based on their night of passion. Then again, McCarthy and Falcone aren’t really in the business of making sensible plot choices.

(One small example of their lazy writing: Deanna makes a reference to the key “Harry Potter” character of Voldemort but then seems to have no idea who fellow “Potter” player Dumbledore is a few scenes later.)

Their work here certainly is an improvemen­t over 2014’s “Tammy,” which also starred McCarthy. As penned by them and performed by McCarthy, Deanna is a very likeable heroine, and her relationsh­ip with her daughter is very sweet. (Gordon gets some of the credit for that with her portrayal of the compassion­ate Maddie.)

However, “Life of the Party” has something akin to the freshman 15 — in that it’s about 15 minutes longer than the 90 it should have been. There are far too many flat scenes and dead spots. A tighter edit might have really helped this campus shindig.

Falcone has improved slightly as a director since “Tammy” — he also was at the helm for 2016’s “The Boss” — but it’s hard to see him getting a directing gig in which his wife isn’t the star. (For what it’s worth, he pops up in an early scene with McCarthy in which he portrays an Uber driver.)

Again, there are funny scenes — and even a nice little reference to the 1978 college-comedy classic “Animal House” — and hardcore fans of McCarthy’s likely will find enough to enjoy in “Life of the Party.”

But, objectivel­y, were term paper, it’s a C effort. this a

 ?? HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP ?? Melissa McCarthy, left, and Jacki Weaver in a scene from “Life of the Party.”
HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP Melissa McCarthy, left, and Jacki Weaver in a scene from “Life of the Party.”
 ?? HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP ?? Melissa McCarthy in a scene from “Life of the Party.” In theaters: Today. Rated: PG-13 for sexual material, drug content and partying. Runtime: 1 hour, 45 minutes. Stars (of four):
HOPPER STONE/WARNER BROS. PICTURES VIA AP Melissa McCarthy in a scene from “Life of the Party.” In theaters: Today. Rated: PG-13 for sexual material, drug content and partying. Runtime: 1 hour, 45 minutes. Stars (of four):

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