Los Angeles Times

Helen Hunt does it all in ‘Ride’

- — Robert Abele

In “Ride,” written and directed by Academy Awardwinni­ng actress Helen Hunt, the pedantic and controllin­g New York editor Jackie (Hunt) follows her collegedro­pout son Angelo (Brenton Thwaites) — an aspiring writer — to Los Angeles to steer him away from all things beachy, chill and, she judgmental­ly fears, sub-literate.

Instead, she discovers surfing, romance with a surf instructor (Luke Wilson) and a path toward self-actualizat­ion that gives her license to let go of her ironclad maternal grip. (In a sweetly wordless prologue scene, Hunt’s young guardian mom sleeps sitting up against her boy’s closed bedroom door.)

This is suitably engaging coming-of-middle-age material, but at nearly every turn, Hunt shines in one discipline while leaving much to be desired in another. The early New York scenes with mother and son bantering/ sniping display crisp, urbanflair direction but carry a forced Mamet-like dialogue style. In California, Hunt and Wilson show solid oppositesa­ttract chemistry, but their emphasis quickly sidelines Angelo as a character.

Getting Jackie to a place of contentmen­t may be the focus, but it’s best relayed through Hunt’s naturally layered performanc­e than her plotting skills, which tack on back story tragedy and that clichéd go-to for loosening up stuffed shirts: adventures in pot.

You can’t blame Hunt for perhaps taking on too much — at least she wrote herself a complicate­d role in this sorry age for front-and-center movie women — but it doesn’t always make for a smooth “Ride.” “Ride.” MPAA rating: R for language, drug use. Running time: 1 hour, 33 minutes. Playing: Sundance Sunset, Los Angeles.

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