Los Angeles Times

Well-intentione­d comedy falls short

- — Gary Goldstein

A strained cross between broad, culture-clash comedy and wistful coming-of-age tale, “Growing Up Smith” is a well-intentione­d fizzle that misses what should have been a reachable mark. But a patchy, overly episodic script by Anjul Nigam, Paul Quinn and Gregory Scott Houghton paired with Frank Lotito’s imprecise direction results in many missed comic and emotional opportunit­ies as well as a poky pace.

In the plus column: the engaging performanc­e by young Roni Akurati as Smith, an eager 10-year-old who, in 1979, moves from India to small-town America with his traditiona­l, at times clueless parents (Nigam, Poorna Jagannatha­n) and teenage sister (Shoba Narayan). Unfortunat­ely, Akurati’s game turn is undercut by the script’s toothless conflicts and inconsiste­nt story strands.

To be fair, there are amusing bits involving Smith’s “Saturday Night Fever” fixation and a mortifying trick-or-treat costume he’s stuck wearing (during an interminab­le Halloween night sequence) plus a few sweet beats between Smith and the object of his affection, neighbor and classmate Amy (Brighton Sharbino).

But Smith’s wan rescue of Amy’s genial dad (Jason Lee), who runs afoul of a shotgun, results in a silly, overblown “local hero” segue.

How Smith’s sister repeatedly cons their parents about her secret dating life is another big stretch.

“Growing Up Smith.” Rating: PG-13, for some language and brief drug use. Running time: 1 hour, 42 minutes. Playing: AMC Burbank 8; AMC Orange 30.

 ?? Sabrina Lantos Ponca City ?? THE COMING-OF-AGE COMEDY centers on a boy named Smith (Roni Akurati, second from left).
Sabrina Lantos Ponca City THE COMING-OF-AGE COMEDY centers on a boy named Smith (Roni Akurati, second from left).

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