Cape Argus

The laughs don’t get old . . .

- HELEN HERIMBI

trying to be a romantic comedy. On the other, the screenwrit­ers realise the very suggestion that the young Elizabeth might have had a fling with an airman verges on the treasonous. The film begins to pull its punches and to become ever more improbable.

Even so, this is a poignant, entertaini­ng affair, with enough of a satirical edge not just to seem like an exercise in cosy British nostalgia. Gadon is exceptiona­l as the cocooned young princess who adjusts with surprising pragmatism to life beyond the palace gates.

DOCUMENTAR­Y film-maker, Josh (Stiller) and producer, Cornelia (Watts), can’t remember what this little piggy does. But they’re quick to Google something instead of trying to remember it. In essence, this middleaged husband and wife pride themselves on being able to have a presence in an old and new world.

But those worlds collide and combust when they meet newlyweds, Jamie (Driver) and Darby (Seyfried).

A budding documentar­y film-maker, Jamie takes a rather obsessive liking to Josh, which, of course, makes Josh feel a lot younger than his friends who have babies and stay in on mid-week nights. Obviously, Jamie and Darby aren’t who Josh and Cornelia think they are and the older couple are forced to rethink their quest to find the fountain of youth by living vicariousl­y through others.

Baumbach shows us a New York City that screams gentrifica­tion. It’s funny to see that Driver’s Jamie has a hard time escaping comparison­s with his character Adam from the Girls TV show. He is the consummate hipster, complete with wide brim hat, ladies’ blouse and a notepad that is whipped out whenever inspiratio­n strikes. Like at dinner.

Watts and Stiller are awesome as the couple who are just too comfortabl­e in the mundane and orchestrat­e their lives around a routine. At one point, they decide that “a month (of planning) in advance is still in the realm of spontaneit­y”. While We’re Young is the perfect film for people with a dry sense of humour.

Jamie and Darby have a room-mate – a real one, not a kinky arrangemen­t – who travels with them sometimes. Every scene sees her donning a statement T-shirt that Mr Price would jump at the opportunit­y to sell. They carry slogans such as “Some Crappy Band” and “Some College I Never Went To.” In that sense, the film is serious as it pokes fun at the idea of wanting to be something you’re not. But it also doesn’t take itself too seriously as it’s still very funny.

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