The Morning Call (Sunday)

Looking for ‘Vengeance,’ Novak found America

His first film a dark comedy about life in nation that may not be so divided

- By Dave Itzkoff

A funny story that B.J. Novak likes to tell from the making of his new movie is about the day he thought he was having a stroke. Are you chuckling yet?

At the start of 2020, Novak, a writer, comedian and alum of “The Office,” had finally gotten the green light to make “Vengeance,” a dark comedy set in smalltown Texas. That’s when he thought he was slurring his speech and called a colleague to ask if he was noticing it, too.

As Novak, 43, recalled, “I was like, you hear that, don’t you? And he said, I do. And I called my doctor and went in the next morning for an MRI, and they said you’re fine, and I realized I’m terrified to make this movie.”

Like a lot of the humor that appeals to Novak — whose symptoms, rest assured, were completely psychosoma­tic — what’s funny about this story is a matter of perspectiv­e.

You can laugh at it in relief, when you know the person telling it is no longer in danger.

This is a theme that comes up frequently in “Vengeance,” which blends some of the awkward cringe comedy that “The Office” was famous for with a knowing, cynical sharpness that would never fly in the hallways of Dunder Mifflin.

The film, now in theaters, is Novak’s debut as a feature director and screenwrit­er, and he stars in it as Ben Manalowitz, a self-assured New York writer. When Ben learns that a woman he dated casually — very casually — has died under hazy circumstan­ces in her Texas hometown, he travels there in hopes of turning the story into a hit podcast.

Although Ben arrives with selfish motives and a stereotypi­cal sense of red-state values, he grows enamored of the dead woman’s family (played by Boyd Holbrook, J. Smith-Cameron, Isabella Amara and Dove Cameron, among others). His investigat­ion also leads him to an astute record producer (Ashton Kutcher) who exerts an ominous influence over the town.

For Novak, “Vengeance” is an ambitious attempt to step out of his sitcom comfort zone and see if he can make it as an Albert Brooks-like leading man. As he said of his acting resume, which has included small roles in “Inglouriou­s Basterds” and other films, “I’m very much a reaction-shot guy. I’ve never been a point-of-view character.”

“Vengeance” is also one of a small number of original comedies that has received a theatrical release, and getting it made required a level of commitment that Novak had never expected.

“I really felt like a madman on the corner,” he said. “I’m going to star in this movie, and it’s a comedy but also a thriller but also a love story. But it’s also about how technology does this to us. I really thought I was nuts, but I kept going.”

But there’s an intensity that colors all his anecdotes about “Vengeance,” whose central premise he had been kicking around for several years.

“We live in divided times, quote-unquote, because we communicat­e completely on our own timelines,” he said. “It was from my experience dating and being a somewhat shallow person who didn’t really know what he was missing until it was too late.”

Novak added, “Every year that went by, it became a more topical film, which I didn’t ever intend it to be.”

Between 2015 and

2018, Novak said, he took research trips to Texas cities like Abilene and Pecos, seeking to dispel his misconcept­ions about a part of the country he assumed would be unwelcomin­g.

“I thought that these huge dudes with beards and pickup trucks would be very suspicious of a Hollywood blue-state guy, and I found the exact opposite,” he said. “It’s the warmest culture I ever found. I went to Easter dinners, and people would show me the poetry they had written.”

Novak returned from his travels with the foundation for what would become “Vengeance,” and with the intention that he would play the lead. “I wrote the role to be impossible to cast with anyone but me,” he said. “You know, superficia­l with a possible hidden heart, blah blah blah.”

The cast for “Vengeance” grew to include Issa Rae, who plays a podcast producer Ben is hoping to impress; singer-songwriter John Mayer, who plays one of Ben’s self-centered New York friends; and Kutcher, who previously employed Novak as an on-camera accomplice for his MTV prank series, “Punk’D.”

Kutcher said he was particular­ly impressed with a long monologue that his character delivered, about people who seem to care less about the lives they lead than the digital records of them that they leave behind.

“When you look at human behavior, and the obsessive nature of chasing that dopamine hit from posting every moment we think is interestin­g or cool or funny, you realize his theory has merit,” Kutcher said.

“Vengeance” arrived in theaters on the heels of blockbuste­rs “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Jurassic World Dominion” and “Thor: Love and Thunder,” at a time when many other low-budget comedies and dramas about more earthbound matters are being released directly to streaming platforms.

Jason Blum, CEO of Blumhouse, one of the companies that produced “Vengeance,” said the film could have just as easily received a streaming release.

“I can’t tell you we didn’t contemplat­e that during the pandemic,” he said.

“We contemplat­ed every possible distributi­on outlet, ever.”

But, Blum said, his company has had success with films from writerdire­ctors who blended comedy and thriller genres, like Jordan Peele’s “Get Out,” and he was hopeful that “Vengeance” might find a similar lane.

“This movie is exactly the kind of movie that people say they want to see,” Blum said. “If it does well, it’ll open a path to put other original movies in theaters, too, not just movies based on existing intellectu­al property.”

For Novak, the theatrical release is an opportunit­y to show “Vengeance” to the same people he hopes it captures and to determine if they appreciate how he has depicted them.

“I really want Texans to like it,” he said. “I wanted to make this Texans’ favorite movie. I even put a Whataburge­r in it. I remember seeing Dunkin’ Donuts in ‘Good Will Hunting.’ As a Bostonian, you just felt so seen.”

 ?? ERIK TANNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? B.J. Novak, seen June 15, wrote and directed “Vengeance.”
ERIK TANNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES B.J. Novak, seen June 15, wrote and directed “Vengeance.”

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