Los Angeles Times

Young lives on a high and low

- By Noel Murray

Writer-director Nick Richey packs a lot into the 92 minutes of his first feature film. “Low Low” takes place over the course of two days in the lives of four lower-middle-class high school girls, nearing the end of their last summer together. As the friends push aside fears about their respective futures — by drinking too much, fighting their enemies and sleeping around — Richey tries to get across what they have been through for the last 18 years, growing up largely unsupervis­ed in broken homes.

The film covers a bit too much ground. A more focused plot might have served these characters better. When “Low Low” is more incident-driven — as in a darkly funny sequence where one of the young women awkwardly asks one of her recent sexual partners for money to buy some Plan B contracept­ion — Richey and his excellent young cast conjure an impressive­ly vivid reality, telling this story through naturalist­ic performanc­e and dialogue.

Even though “Low Low” only hits those kind of highs periodical­ly, this is still a strong debut for Richey, who shows a real compassion and understand­ing for these women. A lot of fledgling filmmakers make autobiogra­phical movies or lean on genre, but “Low Low” follows a different path, empathizin­g with the worries and woes of some whose lives are rarely reflected on screen.

“Low Low.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 32 minutes. Playing: Downtown Independen­t, Los Angeles; available Tuesday on VOD.

Mismatched pair upend rom-com

Reportedly based on an actual dating nightmare that writer-director Anthony Sabet experience­d, the romantic comedy “One Last Night” stars Rachele Schank as Zoe, an L.A. underachie­ver who reluctantl­y agrees to go to a movie with Alex (Luke Brandon Field), an aspiring writer who turns her off immediatel­y with his pretension­s and fussiness. Through a series of mishaps, the mismatched couple ends up locked in the theater overnight and begin to bond as they kill time.

This is a good premise for an inexpensiv­e indie romance: two people, mostly in a single location, getting to know each other while having a little adventure. But while the tone of “One Last Night” is appropriat­ely breezy — and while newcomer Schank makes a wonderful first impression — in a “strangers spend a long evening talking” story, the characters should be more witty and wise, and not as vaguely defined as this pair.

An unnecessar­y (and honestly kind of creepy) mid-film plot twist kills the minimal momentum the film develops in its first half, making this picture feel like a rough assembly of notquite-interestin­g-enough scenes — likely to frustrate any young couple looking for a movie to cozy up with.

“One Last Night.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 17 minutes. Playing: Available on VOD.

‘Awake’ missing a certain spark

The mystery-thriller “Awake” is the kind of twisty crime picture that sometimes turns out to be a minor gem — but not this time. Jonathan Rhys Meyers plays a hospitaliz­ed amnesiac who is a suspect in a string of murders. He goes on the run with the help of a sympatheti­c nurse (Francesca Eastwood) and tries to solve the crimes himself — like something out of a slim, slippery pulp novel.

But the cast and the codirector­s Alex Cher and Fedor Lyass take the wrong approach to this material, downplayin­g plot-driven thrills while aiming for something more characterd­riven and unduly serious, where the heroes wrestle with their troubled pasts more than they try to avoid the cops. The acting’s either overly muted or awkwardly broad (with terrible Southern accents throughout, for no real reason). The slack pacing drains the movie of its urgency. This is a neonoir that never generates any spark.

“Awake.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 32 minutes. Playing: Available on VOD.

 ?? Halfway Crooks Entertainm­ent ?? MONTANA ROESCH is among a group of young women trying to keep the party going in “Low Low.”
Halfway Crooks Entertainm­ent MONTANA ROESCH is among a group of young women trying to keep the party going in “Low Low.”
 ?? Asa Pictures ?? LUKE BRANDON Field and Rachele Schank have first-date issues in the rom-com “One Last Night.”
Asa Pictures LUKE BRANDON Field and Rachele Schank have first-date issues in the rom-com “One Last Night.”
 ?? Zachary Burns Saban Films ?? FRANCESCA Eastwood’s nurse helps an amnesiac (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) find a killer in “Awake.”
Zachary Burns Saban Films FRANCESCA Eastwood’s nurse helps an amnesiac (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) find a killer in “Awake.”

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