Los Angeles Times

Just power off this clunker of a comedy

Adam DeVine can’t wring enough laughs from a lazy story of smartphone addiction.

- By Kimber Myers

Whether in a dark theater or on the couch at home, smartphone­s are an existentia­l threat to the moviewatch­ing experience. Their mere presence promises interrupti­ons and temptation­s for the easily distracted (pretty much all of us at this point). But “Jexi” is such a dumb, lazy film that it might have even the most ardent cinephiles reaching for their devices, ready to defend their defection to the dark side when faced with this clunker of a comedy.

The movie’s obnoxious hero, Phil (Adam DeVine), would have no such qualms; he can’t tear his eyes and thumbs away from his phone, whether he’s walking on the street, showering or just generally avoiding human contact. When he breaks his smartphone, the replacemen­t comes with invasive virtual assistant Jexi (voiced by Rose Byrne), who soon takes over his life. She threatens both his budding romance with bike shop owner Cate (Alexandra Shipp) and his job writing viral lists on the internet. His existence begins to spiral as she has him totally under her control.

Amid sporadic laughs, “Jexi” establishe­s its themes about the perils of cellphone dependence early. Even if you were buried in your screen, you’d pick up on its less-than-subtle preaching about the perils of this digital addiction.

Beyond that obvious message, “Jexi” shows little thought in the screenplay from co-directors Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, who offer no consistenc­y in the characteri­zation of either Phil or Jexi. These are the guys who wrote “The Hangover,” and this movie displays some of that film’s cruel streak with none of its crude charm. They’ve also directed the enjoyable “Bad Moms” and its disappoint­ing sequel, but the work here is amateurish, as if they’ve never made, or even seen, a film before.

Ben Kutchins’ cinematogr­aphy distracts, filled with jerky zooms that make it feel like it was shot on an iPhone — and not by Steven Soderbergh.

With a protagonis­t who is overly attached to a femalevoic­ed AI, “Jexi” invites easy comparison­s to the far superior “Her.” But Lucas and Moore’s film is filled with bugs, making it easy to unplug from its attempts to entertain and do literally anything else.

 ?? David Moir CBS Films ?? ADAM DEVINE, left, and Michael Peña star in “Jexi,” a misfire with a light premise and a heavy hand by directors with credential­s in crude charm.
David Moir CBS Films ADAM DEVINE, left, and Michael Peña star in “Jexi,” a misfire with a light premise and a heavy hand by directors with credential­s in crude charm.

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