The Morning Call (Sunday)

Morosini turns dad’s catfishing ruse into film

Oswalt leads roller coaster of emotions in ‘I Love My Dad’

- By Mark Olsen

The logline for the film “I Love My Dad” includes the phrase “Inspired by a true story. Like, this literally happened to me.” And that is the truth, more or less.

Written by, directed by and starring James Morosini, it’s based on something that actually happened between the filmmaker and his father. During a period of estrangeme­nt, Morosini’s dad set up a fake social media account posing as an attractive young woman and struck up an online friendship with Morosini.

In the film, Franklin (Morosini) is a 20-something at a low period in his life, directionl­ess and depressed. His father, Chuck (Patton Oswalt), who has an excuse for every letdown and mistake, never accepts responsibi­lity for his failed parenting. After Franklin blocks him on social media, Chuck starts an account in the persona of a pretty young waitress named Becca (Claudia Sulewski) and strikes up a relationsh­ip with Franklin that escalates quickly. Eventually, Chuck takes Franklin on a road trip to meet online Becca in person, and the truth collides with a carefully constructe­d fantasy.

Ostensibly a comedy, the film plumbs the emotional depths of Franklin’s depression and Chuck’s inability to own up to all

the ways he has let his son down. The film’s unflinchin­g portrait of its outlandish premise places it high on the meter of cringewort­hy moments.

“Those are my favorite kinds of stories,” Morosini said in a recent interview, “the ones that seem like maybe you shouldn’t be telling them.

“I really didn’t want to make a broad comedy. I didn’t want to let the audience off the hook that easy. So you can’t quite tell, is this supposed to be funny or is this really sad? It keeps your mind having to interrogat­e what this is supposed to be. I think that’s how things feel often in life where you’re laughing and then you’re crying.”

Oswalt didn’t fully believe it was a true story when he first read the script, until Morosini explained it himself.

“I just read it, and it said like ‘based on a true story,’ but I thought he was doing a fake-out like in ‘Fargo,’ ” said Oswalt. “And then he was like, ‘No, here’s what happened.’ And he told me. I was like, ‘Well, I gotta do this.’ ”

The film is the second written by, directed by and starring Morosini following 2018’s microbudge­t “Threesomet­hing,” a study of male friendship through the emotional complicati­ons around a threesome. As an actor, Morosini, 32, has had numerous other roles including “The Sex Lives of College Girls” and “American Horror Story.” “I Love My Dad” won both the grand jury prize and the audience award when it premiered earlier this year at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, and is now in theaters and available via video on demand.

Morosini’s father did not read the script before shooting and saw the film for the first time sitting with his son amid a packed audience during one of the screenings at SXSW. Morosini recalled that it was an emotional experience for both of them.

“I felt very protective of him, honestly, and my dad in reality has been a really great father in a lot of ways,” said Morosini. “I think everybody has limitation­s, and Chuck in the movie has limitation­s, but the movie is really a kind of a love letter back to my dad. It feels like I’m kind of lovingly catfishing him back.”

As for his father’s response, Morosini said, “I mean, he loved it. I think he appreciate­d the kind of emotional puzzle of the film. I think he just intellectu­ally appreciate­d that, so I think it made it an easier pill to swallow.”

The part of Chuck is a rare leading role for Oswalt, who has a long career as a stand-up comedian and actor in film and television. His last true lead was the dark indie “Big Fan” in 2009, for which he was nominated for a Gotham Award. His supporting role in 2011’s “Young Adult” also earned him numerous accolades from critic groups.

Which is not to say that Oswalt has not been extremely busy. A simple scan of his Twitter bio mentions enough projects to fill someone else’s entire resume, including the Netflix series “Sandman” and an upcoming comedy special, “Patton Oswalt: We All Scream,” which marks his directoria­l debut. He co-created the animated series “M.O.D.O.K.” on which he voices the title character and also writes comic books.

Neverthele­ss, Oswalt understand­s why he isn’t often tapped for lead roles.

“Look at how I look.

I get really fun character actor parts, but you don’t put Dwight Frye or Warren Oates as the lead to your big budget film,” he said. “… I always want to serve the project. So if I’m the lead in something, but it’s going to ruin it, I don’t want to be (expletive) in something good. If I’m going to work better as a side character, I’d way rather do that and be great in a couple of scenes than, ‘Well, he was the lead, but he should have just been in that for 10 minutes.’ ”

The film also marks Oswalt’s first producer credit on a feature, a decision born in part from a strategy he acknowledg­es has multiple motives.

“If I can start increasing my profile as a producer, not only does it mean that I can produce my own things, but if there’s some project that I see someone struggling with, then I want to do whatever I can to help,” Oswalt said.

“So it’s partially a form of cinema buff greed where I want more stuff that I like to get made,” Oswalt added. “That’s always been my philosophy. The reason I got into show business was I started off liking movies. I didn’t start off liking money and fame. I liked the movies, so I want those to happen. Everything else is just incidental.”

The process of making “I Love My Dad” was an emotional one for Morosini, and he hopes to take audiences on a similar emotional roller-coaster journey.

“I think Franklin in the beginning of the movie sees things as very black and white, people are either good or bad, honest or dishonest,” he said. “And by the end of the film, he realizes we’re all good and bad. We’re all honest and dishonest. And I think he sees himself in his dad by the end. And I think that’s what I learned as well through making the film, more deeply appreciati­ng that if we were in those circumstan­ces, we might do the same exact thing.

“We’re all dishonest in some way or another,” Morosini added, “and I wanted to make a movie where there weren’t any good guys or bad guys and force audiences to kind of reckon with that idea.”

 ?? MAGNOLIA PICTURES ?? Patton Oswalt, left, and James Morosini star as an estranged father and son in “I Love My Dad.”
MAGNOLIA PICTURES Patton Oswalt, left, and James Morosini star as an estranged father and son in “I Love My Dad.”
 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES JAMES MOROSINI VIA ?? A family photo shows Claudio Lichtentha­l, left, with his son, James Morosini, in 2008.
THE NEW YORK TIMES JAMES MOROSINI VIA A family photo shows Claudio Lichtentha­l, left, with his son, James Morosini, in 2008.

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