Los Angeles Times

‘Slow Learners’

Improvisat­ion doesn’t always work well for the film’s unlucky-in-love characters.

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en

Satirical romantic comedy’s improv gets mixed results.

Call it “Geeks Gone Wild.”

A pair of high school employees desperate to shed their dorky image pledge to let loose during summer vacation in “Slow Learners,” a satirical romantic comedy that gets mixed grades in the laughter department.

At first glance, you’d know Jeffrey (Adam Pally) and Anne (Sarah Burns) have never been mistaken for the cool kids. He’s a doughy-faced, khakis-wearing school guidance counselor and president of an allmale book club, while Anne, his work colleague and best friend, has an affection for cat sweaters and has been diagnosed as “clinically abstinent” by her doctor.

With school break just around the corner, the friends pledge to undergo the sort of extreme makeover that would turn them into “sex-in-the-bathroom people.” Needless to say, the transition doesn’t go quite as planned, but the process yields some amusing, if occasional­ly forced, results.

Making their feature narrative debut after establishi­ng a reputation as doc filmmakers, co-directors Don Argott and Sheena M. Joyce take full advantage of a cast with an extensive background in sketch comedy. Many of the players cut their teeth with the Upright Citizens Brigade and the Groundling­s, while others, including Bobby Moynihan and Cecily Strong, are known for their appearance­s on “Saturday Night Live.”

But being big on improvisat­ion doesn’t necessaril­y mine nuggets of comic brilliance, and there are times you wish Argott and Joyce would have adhered more closely to the Matt Serwordpen­ned script.

For every tart “Did you get a makeover at the meth mall?” there’s a clearly riffed bit that would have been more at home in the film’s obligatory but superfluou­s end-credits outtakes. Neither does the loosey-goosey, keep-the-camera-rollingand-see-what-sticks approach always serve its leads effectivel­y.

Although Pally, who was a regular on “The Mindy Project” and “Happy Endings,” fares better, rooting the career nerd Jeffrey in a sweet goofiness, Burns (“Enlightene­d”) apparently has been encouraged to mug the far flightier Anne into submission. The result is a sketch-bound character who tries too hard by half.

Establishi­ng that ideal tone is a tricky thing to pull off. Nail the perfect balance of outrageous­ness and empathy, and you’ve got the makings of a similarly themed Judd Apatow-Amy Schumer hit collaborat­ion.

This particular “Trainwreck,” on the other hand, becomes too easily derailed.

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 ?? IFC Films ?? ADAM PALLY and Sarah Burns aim to make some changes in “Slow Learners.”
IFC Films ADAM PALLY and Sarah Burns aim to make some changes in “Slow Learners.”

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