Los Angeles Times

Privileged-male angst fuels drama

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

Although it has some commitment issues in terms of wanting to be both a probing domestic drama and a flat-out thriller, Aaron Harvey’s “The Neighbor” finds a sturdy constant in its thoughtful­ly delineated performanc­es and handsome production values.

Resilient character actor William Fichtner gives an affectingl­y reined-in turn as Mike Prentice, a low-key technical writer whose marriage to school teacher Lisa (Jean Louisa Kelly) no longer has the same sparkle as the stainless steel appliances in their upscale kitchen.

But those fissures in their relationsh­ip crack wide open when an attractive young couple (Jessica McNamee and Michael Rosenbaum) lease the house next door, with the arrival of the former serving to seriously fan the flames of Mike’s smoldering midlife crisis.

Considerin­g the many similarly themed films that have come before it, one has a pretty good sense of where the script by director Harvey and Richard Byard is headed, but the actors still manage to work in intriguing complicati­on along the way.

Even if the storytelli­ng eventually succumbs to an ending that feels like it crossed needlessly into a different genre, Harvey’s contained direction and John W. Rutland’s impressive cinematogr­aphy provide a sharply observed continuity that’s as admirably contained as the Prentices’ impeccably appointed, if spirituall­y anemic, home.

“The Neighbor.” Rated: R for language, sexual content, brief violence and drug use. Running time: 1 hour, 37 minutes. Playing: AMC Orange 30, Orange.

 ?? Vertical Entertainm­ent ?? MIKE (WILLIAM FICHTNER) finds his new young neighbors are making his midlife crisis worse.
Vertical Entertainm­ent MIKE (WILLIAM FICHTNER) finds his new young neighbors are making his midlife crisis worse.

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