Los Angeles Times

Road-trip humor takes a fresh turn

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

The rare American remake that actually improves on the original, “Come as You Are” handily defies preconceiv­ed notions at every fresh turn. The touching road comedy is based on the 2011 Belgian import “Hasta la Vista,” a fact-based film about a trio of virgin adult males with disabiliti­es who make a pilgrimage to a brothel.

Desperate to find some time away from the best intentions of his overbearin­g mom (Janeane Garofalo), Scotty (Grant Rosenmeyer), an abrasive, perpetuall­y horny 24-year-old quadripleg­ic, discovers an enticing escape route in the form of Le Chateau Paradis, which specialize­s in providing sexual services to those with special needs.

The only catch is figuring out how he and his buddies — the blind Mo (Ravi Patel) and Matt a.k.a. Biceps (Hayden Szeto), a jock who suffers from a degenerati­ve disease that has put him in a wheelchair — are going to get from Colorado across the border to the bordello’s Montreal location.

Enter Sam (Gabourey Sidibe), a van-driving nurse not without her own baggage, who’s entrusted with ensuring the bumpy ride ultimately reaches the appointed destinatio­n.

Armed with an engaging, genuinely diverse ensemble (although the three leads are all non-disabled) and a terrific script by Erik Linthorst, director Richard Wong sensitivel­y navigates this “journey of outsiders and underdogs” while adeptly sidesteppi­ng the overtly sentimenta­l trappings that occasional­ly snagged the original.

At once frank, tender and unapologet­ically funny, “Come as You Are” is a sweet surprise.

“Come as You Are.” Not rated. Running Time: 1 hour, 36 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Glendale; also on VOD.

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