Los Angeles Times

Gimmicks are not effective

- — Robert Abele

You could excuse the couples’ brunch micro-indie “Fourplay” for its smallbore, one-set theatrical­ity, if it weren’t for the fact that it betrays little understand­ing of how good plays work as both writing and stagecraft.

Brooklynit­es Anna (Tammy Blanchard) and Tom (Bryan Greenberg) — a tightly wound restaurate­ur and her adoring if skittish squeeze — talent agent Joe (Dominic Fumusa) and his New Age-y wife Susan (Emanuela Galliussi) gather for an overlong course of hipster chat and knowing jokes that segues abruptly into a slapped-together entrée of secrets, recriminat­ions and barking.

And if you can’t guess at least a few of those last-minute revelation­s, that’s OK, because though they may be predictabl­e, they also make little sense.

Director Dean Ronalds, who wrote the screenplay with Galliussi and Francesco Plazza, undercuts his Cassavetes-armwrestle­s-Albee ambitions with the trite decision to shoot the whole thing as a single, awkward, hallway-traversing, intimacy-leeching take. (We really are at peak all-in-one-shot cinema — it’s lost all purpose.)

“Fourplay” is in blackand-white too, for no ostensible reason. The actors gamely strive for conversati­onal naturalism, but what they say matters little because you never sense anything other than an environmen­t rigged to explode rather than nurtured into emotional relevance. “Fourplay.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 17 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States