Los Angeles Times

Obnoxious pair sink any comedy

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

The key to every successful comedy, romantic and otherwise, is having central characters who are likable or at least relatable to some degree. It’s a basic concept that’s lost on writer-director Max Heller’s “Born Guilty,” a shrill urban relationsh­ip satire whose lead protagonis­ts are so insufferab­ly self-centered and whiny, there’s little hope for redemption.

Exhibit One: Judith Weiss (Rosanna Arquette), a social worker and lonely New York divorcee with no evident filter, who doesn’t see any problem with offering obnoxious, unsolicite­d advice to random couples she encounters on the street.

Exhibit Two: Her entitled, equally charmless son, Marty (Jay Devore, doing his best Adam Sandler), an L.A.-based junior ad exec — an apple who clearly hasn’t fallen far from the tree.

Although a semblance of a plot eventually kicks in — Marty pays his free-spirited, globe-traveling Aussie buddy, Rawl (David Coussins), to romance his needy, smothering mom with unintended results — Heller, a TV editor in his feature filmmaking debut, buries it under the cartoonish performanc­es and a grating score that sounds like it was lifted from a ’60s sitcom.

It all culminates in an unearned, sins-of-the-parents confrontat­ion in which Marty, rather than taking ownership of his screw-ups, blames Judith for his pronounced character flaws.

While the pair obviously deserve each other, they manage to do nothing to deserve a crucial shred of audience empathy. “Born Guilty.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes. Playing: AMC Sunset 5, West Hollywood.

 ?? Kal Dolgin Freestyle Digital Media ?? A DIVORCEE (Rosanna Arquette) is supposedly romanced by a free-spirited man (David Coussins).
Kal Dolgin Freestyle Digital Media A DIVORCEE (Rosanna Arquette) is supposedly romanced by a free-spirited man (David Coussins).

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