El Dorado News-Times

Crystal, Haddish in ‘Here Today’

- By Jake Coyle

A sleepy and aimless stab at something earnestly “feel-good,” “Here Today” is a wasted pairing of Billy Crystal and Tiffany Haddish that juggles dementia, grief and family squabbles about as adeptly as a daytime soap.

“Here Today,” which opens in theaters Friday, is genial and gentle enough to make it mildly restive. It is, in scenes around leafy Brooklyn Heights, at least leisurely. The film, written by Alan Zweibel and Crystal and based on a short story by Zweibel, is Crystal’s first time directing in 20 years — since the Roger Maris HBO film “61(asterisk).” That, a Yankee story, was more in Crystal’s wheelhouse. The tones here, though, are more ambitious and out of reach for the limp “Here Today.”

Crystal plays Charlie Burnz, a celebrated comedy writer who remains on staff as a kind of sage veteran at “This Just In,” a sketch series styled after “Saturday Night Live.” He still knows comedy, but the scenes at the show, both writing and performing sketches, are curiously lacking any humor. Here, in “This Just In,” is an “SNL” approximat­ion that rivals Aaron Sorkin’s “Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip” in unfunnines­s.

A lunch with Burnz is auctioned off. But when he goes to the restaurant, he’s greeted not by the bidder but the bidder’s ex-girlfriend, Emma Payge (Haddish), who has come just for the free meal. A seafood allergy that sends her to the hospital brings them closer, and soon Emma — a bright and friendly singer with seemingly nothing else to do — gradually, magically becomes close friends with Burnz, just as dementia is setting in for him. His relationsh­ip with his kids (Penn Badgley, Laura Benanti) isn’t good, but Emma’s willing to take care of him. Along the way, there are also first-person perspectiv­e flashbacks to Burnz’s now deceased wife, a saintly woman who died years earlier in an accident.

Following an act like Anthony Hopkins (who so powerfully and rigorously captured the disorienta­tion of dementia in “The Father”) is never easy. But “Here Today,” soaked in sentiment, is a steep fall off. Crystal’s performanc­e of the condition isn’t necessaril­y bad. For Burnz, clarity goes in and out. He has his kids labeled in a photograph; he forgets Sharon Stone’s name while onstage at a Lincoln Center anniversar­y event for a movie he wrote 30 years earlier. Mostly, it’s only an occasional issue for the character — a bit of dramatic window dressing for a story that’s mostly about the reflection­s of an aging writer and his unlikely friendship with Emma.

“Here Today,” a Sony Pictures release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for strong language and sexual references. Running time: 117 minutes. One and a half stars out of four.

 ?? (Cara Howe/Sony Pictures via AP) ?? This image released by Sony Pictures shows Tiffany Haddish, left, and Billy Crystal in a scene from “Here Today.”
(Cara Howe/Sony Pictures via AP) This image released by Sony Pictures shows Tiffany Haddish, left, and Billy Crystal in a scene from “Here Today.”

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