Los Angeles Times

‘Adult Beginners’

- BETSY SHARKEY FILM CRITIC betsy.sharkey@latimes.com

Showing the funny dark side of dealing with grown-up siblings.

“Adult Beginners,” starring Rose Byrne, Nick Kroll and Bobby Cannavale, is the kind of comedy that goes down easy even as it looks at the hard stuff.

In this case, director Ross Katz is concerned with life’s stress fractures and the difficulti­es of dealing with grown-up siblings who haven’t exactly grown up.

The film comes by its funny dark side honestly. Consider its screenwrit­ing troika: Kroll, who has a busy career being droll in his stand-up, on NBC’s “Parks and Recreation” and his own sketch comedy shows; Liz Flahive, a playwright involved in the dark irony of Showtime’s brilliant “Nurse Jackie” as an executive producer; and Jeff Cox, part of the writing team behind the bizarre Will Ferrell competitiv­e ice skating tale “Blades of Glory.” That the indie ended up under the filmmaking umbrella of Jay and Mark Duplass seems a natural since the brothers have turned observatio­nal comedy about ordinary people into a full-time business.

“Beginners” begins when Jake (Kroll) learns, mid-champagne and caviar, at the Manhattan celebratio­n for the high-tech invention he thinks is about to make millions that instead his career is imploding over a faulty part.

Failure sends him home, which is the suburbs and Justine (Byrne), the sister he’s grown distant from. A harried young wife who is pregnant with her second child, Justine lives in the house they both grew up in. Her husband, Danny (Cannavale), is a contractor. Three-year-old nephew Teddy (Caleb and Matthew Paddock) is delightful but demanding — and apparently always on a sugar high. Basically Jake is trading one kind of chaos for another.

With no prospects and no desire to do much except lick his wounds, Jake is soon pressed into becoming Teddy’s “manny.” In dealing with the reality of actually being responsibl­e for the care and feeding of another human, Jake begins to grow up.

Most of what happens under the extended family roof will seem familiar. Jake discovers his sister’s life may be imploding too. His relationsh­ip with Danny clicks then comes apart. There’s a flirtation, then an affair with Blanca (Paula Garces), one of the moms Jake meets at the playground. All the various conflicts, which do have a sitcom flavor, come to a head when Justine goes into labor.

But like most entertaini­ng movies it’s not so much how it ends but the journey.

Katz holds a loose rein, letting his actors rock along like their characters might in real life. Typical is Teddy’s manny/mommy-and-me swim class. Neither Jake nor Justine ever learned to swim, and since they are bickering when Teddy is signed up, they force each other to commit to the class.

It’s a good metaphor since the film is essentiall­y about flounderin­g and trying to keep your head above water. The insights are simple, staying on the surface, which makes for the kind of slight comedy that isn’t too demanding. The bare-bones budget keeps the look barebones too.

Still, Kroll, Byrne and Cannavale are so comfortabl­e in letting Jake, Justine and Danny live and love and fight it out together, they make you hope that everyone in this particular family learns how to swim.

 ?? Radius-TWC ?? BOBBY CANNAVALE, left, Rose Byrne and Nick Kroll star in the new comedy “Adult Beginners.”
Radius-TWC BOBBY CANNAVALE, left, Rose Byrne and Nick Kroll star in the new comedy “Adult Beginners.”

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