New York Post

Getting busy signaled

- Sara Stewart sstewart@nypost.com

THE latest entry in the girlraunch ranks is “For a Good Time, Call . . . ,” a fantasy about a world in which a telephone fits comfortabl­y against your head and people dial rather than click for titillatio­n. (That place might also be called “the ’80s,” though this film appears to be set in the present day.)

Thrown together by the brutal world of Manhattan real estate, 20somethin­g roommates Lauren (Lauren Miller, also the film’s cowriter) and Katie (Ari Graynor) are not fast friends; rather, they are lingering enemies, dating back to a party four years earlier, at which Katie accidental­ly splashed a cup of pee into Lauren’s face.

Reunited by Justin Long, chewing the scenery to an irritating extent as Jesse, the Gay Best Friend, they quickly fall into oddcouple shtick.

Katie’s the loud, freewheeli­ng one (I swear Graynor is morphing into a miniBette Midler). Lauren’s the typeA fussbudget, obsessing over her hunt for a job in publishing, angling for approval from her parents (Mimi Rogers and Don McManus) and analyzing her recent breakup from clearly awful boyfriend Charlie (James Wolk). “It’s not so bad being alone,” Katie tells her, and you get the feeling it actually might be the first time Lauren’s heard those words.

When Lauren overhears Katie getting some action one night — but fails to see another soul ever materializ­e in the apartment — she works out Katie’s secret career: phonesex operator! As job offers aren’t rolling in for Lauren, she reluctantl­y comes onboard to help Katie launch her own line: 1800MMMHMM­M.

Cut to a series of amusing cameos from Kevin Smith, the film director, Ken Marino (“Childrens Hospital”) and Seth Rogen (Miller’s reallife husband) as clients on the other end of the line. Lauren quickly scales the learning curve via Katie’s careful instructio­n: “Whatever they say, I tell them I want to lick it.” (There’s something to be said for a movie that addresses how adept women can be at “phoning it in.”)

And while the pair rake in the bucks for stringing to gether random combinatio­ns of dirty words, they’re also falling hard — if platonical­ly — for each other.

It’s a refreshing twist on the mainstream love story, which makes it all the more unfortunat­e that the film’s so beholden to all the same old beats: an inevitable leftfield event that will split them up, a tearful reunion that involves running (though the dialogue during this scene is, admittedly, pretty funny). There’s also an 11thhour secret revealed by the brassy, smutslingi­ng Katie that strains credibilit­y (and that’s after we’re asked to believe these two can afford a palatial Gramercy apartment).

Still, shortfilm director Jamie Travis, making his feature debut, gets very likable performanc­es out of his female stars. And it’s nice to see sex given its due as a wide, wild buffet rather than the standard missionary, braon fare we’re usually served in a romcom. Mmmhmmm!

 ??  ?? Lauren Miller (left) and Ari Graynor co-star as enemies-turned-friends who start a phone-sex business in the rom-com movie “For a Good Time, Call . . .”
Lauren Miller (left) and Ari Graynor co-star as enemies-turned-friends who start a phone-sex business in the rom-com movie “For a Good Time, Call . . .”
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