San Francisco Chronicle

Person to Person

- By G. Allen Johnson G. Allen Johnson is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: ajohnson@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @BRfilmsAll­en

Writer-director Dustin Guy Defa achieves something quite remarkable in “Person to Person”: a dialogue-driven film following more than a dozen characters during the course of one day in New York City, with not one convincing situation or performanc­e.

When you have actors such as Michael Cera, Philip Baker Hall and rising comedianac­tress Abbi Jacobson, that’s hard to do.

Cera and Jacobson are newspaper reporters, and it’s clear they have not done a lick of research or been in a newsroom. Heck, watching a good newspaper movie like “Spotlight” would have yielded a pointer or two. They find themselves investigat­ing an apparent suicide that could be murder, with an antique shop owner/watch repairman (Hall) possibly providing a valuable clue, as they follow a suspicious-acting widow (Michaela Watkins) and two NYPD detectives assigned to the case.

There are three other main threads: Two girls (Tavi Gevinson, Olivia Luccardi) skip high school for the day, discuss their increasing­ly strained relationsh­ip and hang out with a couple of guys; a collector of rare records (Bene Coopersmit­h) is trying to track down a crook (Buddy Duress) who sold him a fake rare Charlie Parker record; and the collector’s roommate (George Sample III) is in hot water with his exgirlfrie­nd (Marsha Stephanie Blake) and her brother (Brian Tyree Henry) after he posts nude pictures of her online in revenge for the breakup.

Despite these plotlines that suggest dramatic conflict, “Person to Person” is an oddly low-key, almost gentle film with characters generating no real threat to do anything interestin­g. At 84 minutes, it seems padded out.

It actually evokes the feeling of an indie film from the 1990s, shot on 16mm and following a group of quirky characters (a la “Slacker” or “The Daytripper­s,” two superior movies from that era).

In this case, the Big Apple has never looked so small and inconseque­ntial.

 ?? Magnolia Pictures ?? Michael Cera and Abbi Jacobson are unconvinci­ng newspaper reporters in New York City investigat­ing an apparent suicide that could be murder in “Person to Person.”
Magnolia Pictures Michael Cera and Abbi Jacobson are unconvinci­ng newspaper reporters in New York City investigat­ing an apparent suicide that could be murder in “Person to Person.”

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