Los Angeles Times

The same old song, clichéd sitcom variety

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en calendar@ latimes. com

A romantic- dramedy about a young woman determined to protect the legacy of her late folk singer husband, “Tumbledown” sees its good intentions undermined by cloying sitcom convention­s.

An always- welcome Rebecca Hall gives a sensitivel­y inhabited performanc­e as Hannah, who has been holed up in her woodsy Maine cabin for the last couple of years attempting to chronicle her husband Hunter’s life and music.

Enter Andrew ( Jason Sudeikis), a smug, strident New York academic with a publishing deal to write his own take on the tormented musician, whose death while hiking in the mountains had been considered an accident.

As dictated in Rom- Com 101, their initial clash of personalit­ies will eventually give way to a common understand­ing, but while this f irst feature by Sean Mewshaw, written by his wife, Desiree Van Til, provides them with a fertile backdrop, it eventually comes tumbling down under the weight of tired smaller screen clichés.

Looking very lumbersexu­al with his cropped beard and plaid f lannel, Sudeikis ultimately fails to make us feel what Hannah sees beyond his character’s big- city arrogance; while Joe Manganiell­o, sporting a cartoonish New England accent as her blue- collar friend with benefits, seems to exist only to trade barbs with the erudite Andrew.

Hannah — and the audience — deserves better.

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in the romantic dramedy “Tumbledown,” in which Jason Sudeikis costars.
Starz Dig i t al I T’S MAN VERSUS DOG in the romantic dramedy “Tumbledown,” in which Jason Sudeikis costars.

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