The Bottom Line
Unusual production yields a familiar group rom-com.Venue
Seattle International Film FestivalCast
Caitlin Fitzgerald, Peter Scanavino, Cheyenne Jackson, Michael Stahl-David, Christina Cole, Ross PartridgeDirector
Matthew WattsMatthew Watts assembles an ensemble relationship film out of stories penned by a half-dozen collaborators.
A gaggle of well-to-do New Yorkers fumble their way through relationship crises in Matthew Watts's Mutual Friends,
whose various subplots were penned by multiple writing teams, then
woven into a circle-of-friends narrative leading everyone to one very
uncomfortable surprise party. The film's comic flow suffers from this
patchwork approach, with individual storylines feeling both incomplete
and overemphasized; as a whole, the film is diverting but unlikely to
draw much attention.
The central point for all this action is Liv (Caitlin Fitzgerald), who is planning a birthday party for her hunky fiance Christoph (Cheyenne Jackson). As she goes about the day's harried preparations -- handling cake and catering crises, accidentally inviting a friend-of-a-friend who turns out to be Christoph's long-term ex-girlfriend -- her siblings and friends have troubles of their own.
Beatrice (Christina Cole) has gotten pregnant and doesn't realize how freaked out this makes her husband; Sammy (Ross Partridge), intuiting that his wife is cheating on him, enlists his assistant Chernus (Michael Chernus) to go on a stakeout; Thomas (Devin Burnam), given a very specific party-prep chore to do, instead spends the day with a stripper buying party favors that will definitely not go with the event's we've-all-married-to-lawyers vibe. Then there's Nate (Peter Scanavino), Liv's best friend, who wants to chat with her about their ill-advised night together last Labor Day.
With the emphasis the script puts on Nate's no-strings-attached romantic philosophy rubbing against his need to clear the air about this one-night stand, even a poor student of romantic comedies will see this one's end coming early. Similarly prefab is the film's hunger to include shots of as many Big Apple sights as possible, as if setting these young actors against images of Chelsea and Central Park will make them more convincing as successful professionals. It doesn't, really, and token slacker Nate isn't as roguishly charming as the film thinks he is, even with an acoustic guitar in his hands. The picture's snowballing social mishaps provide for a laugh here and there, but almost all those assorted plotlines fizzle when they're all stacked up together.
Production Companies: Covert Productions, Firebrand Films
Cast: Caitlin Fitzgerald, Peter Scanavino, Cheyenne Jackson, Michael Stahl-David, Christina Cole, Ross Partridge
Director: Matthew Watts
Screenwriters: Matthew Watts, Frank Angones, Jessica Sue Burstein, Craig DiFolco, Ross Partridge, Olivia Silver, Amy Higgins
Producers: Jennifer Westin
Executive producers: Michael Tannen
Director of photography: Ming Kia Leung
Production designer: Simone Duff
Music: Justin Rice
Costume designer: Tracy Moulton
Editor: Jeff Gilbert
Sales: Noor Ahmed, Reder & Feig LLP
No rating, 84 minutes
The central point for all this action is Liv (Caitlin Fitzgerald), who is planning a birthday party for her hunky fiance Christoph (Cheyenne Jackson). As she goes about the day's harried preparations -- handling cake and catering crises, accidentally inviting a friend-of-a-friend who turns out to be Christoph's long-term ex-girlfriend -- her siblings and friends have troubles of their own.
Beatrice (Christina Cole) has gotten pregnant and doesn't realize how freaked out this makes her husband; Sammy (Ross Partridge), intuiting that his wife is cheating on him, enlists his assistant Chernus (Michael Chernus) to go on a stakeout; Thomas (Devin Burnam), given a very specific party-prep chore to do, instead spends the day with a stripper buying party favors that will definitely not go with the event's we've-all-married-to-lawyers vibe. Then there's Nate (Peter Scanavino), Liv's best friend, who wants to chat with her about their ill-advised night together last Labor Day.
With the emphasis the script puts on Nate's no-strings-attached romantic philosophy rubbing against his need to clear the air about this one-night stand, even a poor student of romantic comedies will see this one's end coming early. Similarly prefab is the film's hunger to include shots of as many Big Apple sights as possible, as if setting these young actors against images of Chelsea and Central Park will make them more convincing as successful professionals. It doesn't, really, and token slacker Nate isn't as roguishly charming as the film thinks he is, even with an acoustic guitar in his hands. The picture's snowballing social mishaps provide for a laugh here and there, but almost all those assorted plotlines fizzle when they're all stacked up together.
Production Companies: Covert Productions, Firebrand Films
Cast: Caitlin Fitzgerald, Peter Scanavino, Cheyenne Jackson, Michael Stahl-David, Christina Cole, Ross Partridge
Director: Matthew Watts
Screenwriters: Matthew Watts, Frank Angones, Jessica Sue Burstein, Craig DiFolco, Ross Partridge, Olivia Silver, Amy Higgins
Producers: Jennifer Westin
Executive producers: Michael Tannen
Director of photography: Ming Kia Leung
Production designer: Simone Duff
Music: Justin Rice
Costume designer: Tracy Moulton
Editor: Jeff Gilbert
Sales: Noor Ahmed, Reder & Feig LLP
No rating, 84 minutes
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