Los Angeles Times

They’re no longer so happy together

- — Katie Walsh

Writer-director-actress Lake Bell’s directoria­l debut, “In a World …,” sparkled with a refreshing feistiness in its unapologet­ic takedown of gender inequality in Hollywood.

Her follow-up film, “I Do … Until I Don’t,” which she also wrote, directed and stars in, might have taken a similarly voracious bite out of the institutio­n of marriage, but unfortunat­ely it seems that Bell has been defanged.

“I Do … Until I Don’t” boasts a provocativ­e premise: a British documentar­ian, Vivian Prudeck (Dolly Wells), lands in Vero Beach, Fla., to film her latest project, which argues marriage should be a seven-year contract with the option to renew.

She finds several subjects for her ethnograph­ic magnifying glass, including Cybil (Mary Steenburge­n) and Harvey (Paul Reiser), who can barely conceal their mutual contempt; the awkward Alice (Bell, cartoonish­ly fussy) and Noah (Ed Helms), conflicted about conception and struggling with their business; and blissfully happy hippies Fanny (Amber Heard) and Zander (Wyatt Cenac), whose open relationsh­ip offers counterbal­ance.

With such prime examples of marital discord, Vivian can’t imagine how her film might be anything other than a slam dunk.

However, Bell jettisons any possibilit­y for radical ideals or emotional poignancy in favor of a hackneyed rom-com ending tacked onto a movie that’s both stale and unpleasant­ly madcap. “I Do … Until I Don’t.” Rated: R, for sexual material and language. Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes. Playing: In limited release.

 ?? Film Arcade ?? WEDDED BLISS? Not anymore for the awkward couple Noah (Ed Helms) and Alice (Lake Bell).
Film Arcade WEDDED BLISS? Not anymore for the awkward couple Noah (Ed Helms) and Alice (Lake Bell).

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