Los Angeles Times

Endearing entry deserves an audit

- — Gary Goldstein

“Love & Taxes” is an amusing, endearing trifle based on a monologue by writer-star Josh Kornbluth. Directed by Josh’s brother, Jacob, the film gently engages as it swings between bits from Josh’s autobiogra­phical stage show about his life-changing struggle with the Internal Revenue Service and sketch-like reenactmen­ts of his twisty underdog tale.

The story flashes back on how schlubby man-child Josh, while working as a legal secretary to a gung-ho San Francisco tax attorney (Warren Keith), is forced to face his chronic failure to file his taxes, a tradition inherited from his “stick-it-to-theman” dad (Robert Sicular).

Although Josh’s mission to square his debt sends him into a vortex of bureaucrac­y and need, it also strangely opens the door to new showbiz opportunit­ies — including a screenwrit­ing gig for a Hollywood producer (Harry Shearer) — and to finding a sweetly neurotic girlfriend, Sara (Sarah Overman). Sara’s pregnancy and conditions for marrying Josh add ticking-clock tension.

That it all somehow leads to revisiting Josh and Jacob’s (Anthony Nemirovsky) fortuitous collaborat­ion on their first feature (a 2001 Sundance Film Festival entry), the office comedy “Haiku Tunnel,” feels a bit self-serving. Still, the movie’s wryly optimistic tone, Woody Allen-esque flights of fancy and enjoyable cast, including Helen Shumaker, Nicholas Pelczar and former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, make for a fun concoction. “Love & Taxes.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes. Playing: Laemmle NoHo 7, North Hollywood; Art Theater, Long Beach

 ?? Abramorama ?? JOSH KORNBLUTH reprises his autobiogra­phical stage show on his tax problems in cinematic fashion.
Abramorama JOSH KORNBLUTH reprises his autobiogra­phical stage show on his tax problems in cinematic fashion.

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