Los Angeles Times

On a ‘Ride’ to nowhere

- — Noel Murray

Ride-share services like Uber and Lyft have changed our relationsh­ip with taxis and the way we think about cabbies. The most perceptive idea in writer-director Jeremy Ungar’s L.A. neonoir “Ride” is that the driver protagonis­t, James (Jessie T. Usher), has been trained to treat his customers like friends, and they’re accustomed to reciprocat­ing. That’s how James’ night goes awry.

Unfortunat­ely, that’s about all there is to “Ride,” a well-acted film with decent dialogue but not much heft. In the short running time, James first picks up and flirts with a woman named Jessica (Bella Thorne), then moves on to the motormouth­ed Bruno (Will Brill), who cheerily encourages him to go find Jessica again. Once she’s back in the picture, Bruno pulls out a gun, and the evening gets weird.

Though most of the movie takes place in a car, Ungar makes good use of the Los Angeles setting, if only because these three have a lot of opinions about movie history and showbiz glamour.

But too much of their conversati­on turns to analyzing their emotions and personal histories and not about being held at gunpoint by a mysterious kook. Bruno’s mortal threat is mostly treated as an abstractio­n.

Ultimately, “Ride” feels a little like a drama class exercise, with the leads digging deep into their characters’ motivation­s and feelings. All three nail their parts. But their story never gets out of first gear. “Ride.” Rated: PG-13, for mature thematic content involving violence, abuse, racial epithets and brief drug material. Running time: 1 hour, 17 minutes. Playing: Laemmle NoHo 7, North Hollywood.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States