Get us in your inbox

Ceremony

  • Film
Advertising

Time Out says

Children's-book author Sam Davis (Angarano) lives in what might kindly be described as Wes Andersonville: a teeth-grating land of mannered widescreen compositions and faux-witty dialogue ("What kind of dragon do I have to slay to get a drink around these parts?"). It's the sort of place where the threadbare comic plot is likely to take a third-act detour into pathos; until two-dimensional souls are bared, we get to watch Sam do his hipster-run-rampant act through a weekend-long party at a Long Island estate. Our twitchily adorable protagonist is trying to win over fuck-buddy-cum-muse Zoe (Thurman). She's about to marry a haughty anthropological-film maker (Pace) who amusingly poses with his subjects in United Colors of Benetton vainglory. And Sam just ain't having that.

Credit writer-director Max Winkler with keeping things moving at a brisk clip. Unlike last year's Andersonesque knockoff The Extra Man, this romantic dramedy is focused as opposed to casually rambling; Ceremony passes by quickly and painlessly, its annoyances easily forgotten. On the plus side, Thurman and Angarano do work up a sweet odd-pair chemistry---he often stands on his toes to match up to her Amazonian grandeur---but you never believe you're watching anything but two talented performers goofing around. Angarano in particular can do rapid-fire Hawks-speak with the best of them, but the duo just seems to be lazing about between more financially and emotionally lucrative gigs.

Watch the trailer

See more in Film

Written by Keith Uhlich
Advertising
You may also like
You may also like