The Mercury News

Kevin Hart shows range in tearjerker ‘Fatherhood’

Comedic actor is the only surprise in predictabl­e but moving drama

- By Lindsey Bahr

Kevin Hart can make us laugh and cry, it seems, even if the vehicle was practicall­y engineered to bring on the waterworks.

In “Fatherhood,” now available on Netflix, he plays a new dad whose wife dies shortly after childbirth and he’s left raising their daughteron­hisown.

To be fair, there’s been many built-in tearjerker­s that have failed (remember “Life Itself”?). But something has to go very, very wrong for a film to mess up that kind of premise. “Fatherhood” doesn’t just succeed on that emotional level, though — it’s also a cut about the rest, thanks to a smart and funny and basically authentic script (director Paul Weitz and Dana Stevens) and Hart’s inspired casting.

The story is based on Matthew Logelin’s memoir, “Two Kisses for Maddy: A Memoir of Loss and Love,” about losing his wife after she gave birth to their daughter. Since its publicatio­n 10 years ago, it’s had a few different lives, first as a Lifetime movie, then as a Channing Tatum vehicle, before finally landing Weitz (“About a Boy”) as a director and Hart as his star.

Hart plays Matt, a Boston profession­al with a beautiful wife. The film introduces him at her funeral,

before cutting back to how it happened. The script does a good job at introducin­g you to Matt and Liz (Deborah Ayorinde) and making her more than just a bland stand-in for “wife” while you brace for what’s coming. And of course, it’s not about them but Matt and his baby daughter, Maddy. He doesn’t even have time

to grieve. He’s got a little human to keep alive.

“Fatherhood” smooths out many of the edges of real life. Money does not seem to be a worry for Matt, he has parents and in-laws (Alfre Woodard is terrific as his mother-in-law) who are more than willing to take him and Maddy back to Minnesota, and his early parenting trials are all presented in palatable, bite-sized does.

One day is crib setup. One day she screams a lot. There’s even a “babies are hard but funny” montage set to SaltN-Pepa’s “Push It,” where we breeze through installing a car seat and almost leaving it (with a baby inside) at the grocery store. This is not a “Tully”-style representa­tion of the deep exhaustion of caring for an infant.

The film does a good job balancing the drama with the comedy however, and is helped by a strong supporting cast, including Lil Rel Howery and Anthony Carrigan as Matt’s best friends.

And within the sitcom dramedy aesthetic, there are moments of truth and grace, from Matt panic-vacuuming to simulate white noise so the colicky baby can sleep to him pleading with his mother-in-law that he’ll never know if he’s a good parent if he doesn’t get the chance to try. It’s never entirely clear why he doesn’t want their help or needs to move back to their hometown.

“Fatherhood” skips forward to kindergart­en, which is a little jarring, but it’s nice to see Maddy (Melody Hurd) with a personalit­y and point of view and to give Hart someone other than a baby to connect with. It also allows the film to introduce a love interest (played by DeWanda Wise). You may never be surprised by where “Fatherhood” is going, but you forgive it, too.

It’s all done with a good heart. Even the cliché moments are understand­able. Sometimes brutal realism is overrated when it comes to newborns in movies. And, let’s be honest, you’re much more likely to rewatch “Fatherhood” than “Tully.”

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Kevin Hart, left, and Alfre Woodard star in the formulaic but entertaini­ng drama “Fatherhood”
NETFLIX Kevin Hart, left, and Alfre Woodard star in the formulaic but entertaini­ng drama “Fatherhood”

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