THE IDEA OF YOU (B+) - Don't let me underestimate Michael Showalter again. With a trailer that looked like a silly romantic comedy, there was trepidation going into "The Idea of You," in which a 40-year-old woman falls in love with a 24-year-old pop star she meets-cute at his Coachella show. But Showalter -- and star Anne Hathaway -- pull off a thoughtful, heart-warming (and surprisingly believable) story.
Showalter won us over with "Hello, My Name Is Doris" in 2016, with the similar theme of an older woman and younger man. (We're assuming he has cougar issues.) He also scored as director of "The Big Sick" and "The Eyes of Tammy Faye." He sits right in that B-plus/A-minus pocket as a filmmaker. Here he co-writes with Jennifer Westfeldt ("Kissing Jessica Stein") and newcomer Robinne Lee, both of whom are known more for their acting. And while they don't revolutionize the rom-com, they dodge plenty of potholes as we wonder will they or won't they make it in the end (not just the characters but the filmmakers).
Hathaway is Solene, who plans a solo camping trip for her 40th birthday, but instead has to sub for her douchey ex-husband Daniel ("Veep's" Reid Scott) and take their daughter, Izzy (Ella Rubin), and her friends to Coachella. Solene accidentally stumbles into the trailer of boy-band hunk Hayes (Nicholas Galitzine), and he ends up dedicating a song to her at the end of the concert, sparking an affair that Solene keeps from her friends and daughter -- until the paparazzi inevitably expose the pair canoodling during his European tour. Eventually Solene feels snubbed and mocked by the much younger women tagging along on the tour.
Solene storms out, but Hayes wants to give it a go back in L.A., and the film offers a fascinating depiction of life in the 24/7 media glare and the oppression it rains on all kinds of relationships. Hathaway is believable as a dedicated gallery owner (that's how Hayes tracks her down, proceeding to buy out her stock to free her up for the fling). The writers exploit the drawn-out game of cat-and-mouse, but they don't burden the plot. Even a leap in time doesn't take the viewer out of the story. And a running thread involving Hayes' wristwatch (helping mark the passage of time) is a jewel of a MacGuffin.
Hathaway, acting her age, remains a compelling presence, and she does a convincing job of playing an Everywoman with real feelings and desires. Galitzine is perfectly pouty but he's no lightweight, as he chafes at the artificial life he leads, seeing an off-ramp from the teen lark that has enriched him. The music (some of it created by Galitzine) seems perfectly legit as performed by a lightweight outfit called August Moon. I wanted to skip this entirely, and I was prepared to pull the plug after 20 minutes, but I was hooked, if not swooning like a teenage girl.
MAGIC FARM (C) - If I hadn't read a synopsis of the plot and a review or two in advance, I probably would never have been able to follow Amalia Ulman's sophomore effort, a purported comic treatise on the vapidity of internet influencers and ugly Americans in general. It is coy to the point of being inscrutable at times.
Let's consider it a treading-water transition phase for Ulman, who offered sharp satire and dry-as-toast humor in her 2021 debut, "El Planeta." (She also stars in both films.) In "Magic Farm," a Vice-like group of trend-spotting reporter/influencers -- led by the droll, older fashion maven Edna (Chloe Sevigny) -- ends up in the wrong South American city of San Cristobal, and rather than admit their mistake or go to the right place, they save money and stick around, conjuring up a fake trend to report on.
It's a bumbling crew in a quirky Argentine town, and Ulman lightens the proceedings further by toying with camera perspectives (mounting one on a dog, for no particular reason, and bookending the film with a psychedelic distortion of perspective) and by allowing her cast to compete in a drollery contest. The town is full of what we once called freaks -- people either mildly or severely deformed physically but with-it mentally. It will turn out that there is "something in the water," as they say, which is causing the abnormalities, and Ulman's satire is apparently making a statement about the obliviousness of internet "news" culture, in that these trend-hounds can't spot a big story even when it's staring them in the face.
At least I think that's what was going on. Ulman never makes any of this explicit, or even, at times, implicit. She just shuffles along spinning a story that seems to have started before the first scene, leaving us in the middle, catching up. Sevigny is sharp as the exasperated Gen Xer annoyed by her young crew. Simon Rex is wasted in a cameo as her partner. (He literally phones in one of his scenes.) Alex Wolff is fun as Jeff, the horndog producer who lusts after one of the locals, Manchi (Camila del Campo), whose own libido overwhelms anyone around her. Ulman has the character climb a tree to achieve an internet connection so that she can preen online. (In one perfectly timed exchange, Manchi, in accented English, brags about having "online friends," and Jeff hears it as "OnlyFans.")
I didn't shut this off, but I questioned why I was devoting an hour and a half to such a shaggy-dog tale. It has its charm, and I'm glad Ulman does not feel constrained by convention. Let's see what she does next.
UNDER THE TREE (2018) (B-minus) - This arch bit of feud-porn is a placid, frustrating satire from Iceland. It involves a man caught in a neighborly feud over a shade tree, between his parents and the couple next door.
Steinthor Hroar Steinthorsson stars as Atli, who crashes with his parents after his wife, Agnes (Lara Johanna Jonsdottir), kicks him out for watching porn of himself and an ex. That is strike one against the film; it's a stretch to think that a husband would be so unguarded, especially watching something that particular. His parents' suburban neighbors keep complaining about too much shade from the parents' tree, and so begins a series of microaggressions (slashed tires, surveillance cameras, personal insults) that slowly build to macro ones.
Writer-director Hafsteinn Gunnar Sigurosson takes this thin premise and then burdens it with a brutal escalation of the dispute. If you notice both a cat and a dog in the trailer and fear for their safety, brace yourself. This isn't so much dark comedy as a disturbing series of events. He draws good performances out of Edda Bjorgsvindottir as Atli's vengeful mother, who has never gotten over what happened to Atli's brother, and Sigurdur Sigurjonsson as Atli's checked-out father, who takes solace in the comforts found "at the bottom of a bottle."
It all passes in a tidy 89 minutes, and there are some interesting ideas explored. You just with Sigurosson could have maintained the thread and struck more of a tonal balance.