Los Angeles Times

Last trip home can be funny

- — Gary Goldstein

Anchored by a nicely understate­d performanc­e by Seann William Scott, “Just Before I Go” effectivel­y juggles a wealth of genuine, at times profound, emotion with quite a bit of nutty-raunchy humor. First-time feature director Courteney Cox, working off a deceptivel­y dimensiona­l script by Dave Flebotte, steers this tricky ship with a deft hand and a strong sense of timing, comic and otherwise.

Scott plays Ted Morgan, an L.A. pet store manager haunted by a rocky childhood and underwhelm­ed by a dead-end present. His dubious solution: to kill himself. First, however, he must return to his Massachuse­tts hometown to square things with some folks who caused him grief as a boy.

Ted moves in with his crass older brother, Lucky (Garret Dillahunt), a local cop; Lucky’s restless wife (Kate Walsh); and their two sons, one of whom, closeted gay teen Zeke (Kyle Gallner), will undergo his own cathartic journey.

Other townies Ted encounters include his abusive seventh-grade teacher (Beth Grant); her attractive, lonely granddaugh­ter (Olivia Thirlby); the erstwhile school bully (Rob Riggle); a kindly former classmate (Mackenzie Marsh), now a plus-sized mother of five with a devoted husband (David Arquette); and Ted’s free-spirited mom (Connie Stevens), whose better half is a female Elvis impersonat­or (an uncredited Diane Ladd).

Although it’s not based on the world’s most unique setup, the film plays out in a series of unexpected, deeply felt, often highly quirky scenarios. It’s all capped by an ending that ties up the concerns of the story’s eclectic ensemble with satisfying grace. “Just Before I Go.” MPAA rating: R for sexual content, language, drug use. Running time: 1 hour, 31 minutes. Playing: Sundance Sunset, Los Angeles.

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