Los Angeles Times

They’re on one contrived cruise

- — Gary Goldstein

As much a commercial for Royal Caribbean cruises as dramedy about a bumpy daughter-dad reunion, “Like Father” swamps its workable emotional core and adept lead turns with some slapdash plotting and a raft of floating festivitie­s.

Still, when the relationsh­ip at the well-intended heart of writer-director Lauren Miller Rogen’s film, based on a story by Rogen and producer Anders Bard, is kept simple and true, we see what may have attracted stars Kristen Bell and Kelsey Grammer to this otherwise unremarkab­le piece.

Bell plays Rachel, a workaholic New York ad exec who’s jilted at the altar (a crisis largely reserved for movies) and lands on her Jamaica-bound honeymoon cruise with her long-estranged father, Harry (Grammer). How that all happens is too contrived for words — so I’ll provide none.

But over this excursion, the resentful Rachel and regretful Harry slowly, predictabl­y mend their damaged dynamic via glitzy shipboard activities, a few inport adventures and lots of cocktails that lead the pair to realize how alike they are. (They’re not, but whatever.)

Credible bits of gap-filling history help bond father and daughter, however a story strand involving his late business partner feels awkward and misguided.

In addition, Rachel and Harry’s dining table mates — three chipper couples (one gay, one aging, one African American) — seem more expedient than real. But Seth Rogen (the filmmaker’s hubby) is fun as Rachel’s shipboard hookup.

“Like Father.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes. Playing: Streaming on Netflix.

 ?? Cara Howe Netf lix ?? KELSEY GRAMMER and Kristen Bell costar in this predictabl­e dramedy that feels like an ad for a cruise.
Cara Howe Netf lix KELSEY GRAMMER and Kristen Bell costar in this predictabl­e dramedy that feels like an ad for a cruise.

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