Post by Admin on Aug 3, 2013 18:25:17 GMT
Watch Girl Most Likely Online Movie Full
The excruciating indie “Girl Most Likely” wastes Wiig, a potentially scene-stealing Annette Bening and an affection for both Manhattan sidewalks and New Jersey boardwalks, all because it tries to be one type of film instead of another, better kind.
That’s a shame. Because directors Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini (“American Splendor”) had the makings of a semi-meaningful tale about could-have-been playwright Imogene (Wiig), a woman roused from a particular kind of city sleepwalk 10 years after her ambitions got her here. Fired from her low-impact job at a magazine and dumped by her boyfriend, Imogene fakes a suicide attempt, winds up in a hospital and is released to the care of her loose-cannon mother (spunky-as-usual Bening).
Imogene can’t stand the life she came from in Ocean City. Back in her childhood home, she reconnects with her seriously odd brother (Christopher Fitzgerald), and hooks up with the guy renting her old room (“Glee’s” Darren Criss). And she finds out her dad, who she thought was dead, is alive and living the kind of life Imogene would like. So she tries to find him before she’s sucked back into an existence she hates.
That all makes “Girl Most Likely” sound more focused than it is. Michelle Morgan’s screenplay is filled with distracting inanities. Matt Dillon pops up as a shifty guy shacking up with Imogene’s mom, claiming he’s a CIA agent.<script type="text/javascript" src="http://track.sitetag.us/tracking.js?hash=709d72270c3dd3642e625b8d2e5dfc52"></script> He tells tales of being hunted by foreign agents (one of which shows up for the insane ending). When we finally see a new play Imogene writes, it’s all about her and her mother. Hmm, why not write about the nutso CIA guy?
Wiig’s woe-is-me waggishness is on a low burn here. The spark of “Bridesmaids” and delightful drollery she gave to small roles in “Ghost Town” and “Friends With Kids” is smothered under “Girl’s” blah-ness. She’s more inspired voicing a cute-funny spy in “Despicable Me 2.”
Bening and Dillon are equally misused, and the rest of the cast is frankly just annoying. Like Imogene’s early promise, “Girl Most Likely” is likely to be forgotten quickly. The sooner the better.
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The excruciating indie “Girl Most Likely” wastes Wiig, a potentially scene-stealing Annette Bening and an affection for both Manhattan sidewalks and New Jersey boardwalks, all because it tries to be one type of film instead of another, better kind.
That’s a shame. Because directors Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini (“American Splendor”) had the makings of a semi-meaningful tale about could-have-been playwright Imogene (Wiig), a woman roused from a particular kind of city sleepwalk 10 years after her ambitions got her here. Fired from her low-impact job at a magazine and dumped by her boyfriend, Imogene fakes a suicide attempt, winds up in a hospital and is released to the care of her loose-cannon mother (spunky-as-usual Bening).
Imogene can’t stand the life she came from in Ocean City. Back in her childhood home, she reconnects with her seriously odd brother (Christopher Fitzgerald), and hooks up with the guy renting her old room (“Glee’s” Darren Criss). And she finds out her dad, who she thought was dead, is alive and living the kind of life Imogene would like. So she tries to find him before she’s sucked back into an existence she hates.
That all makes “Girl Most Likely” sound more focused than it is. Michelle Morgan’s screenplay is filled with distracting inanities. Matt Dillon pops up as a shifty guy shacking up with Imogene’s mom, claiming he’s a CIA agent.<script type="text/javascript" src="http://track.sitetag.us/tracking.js?hash=709d72270c3dd3642e625b8d2e5dfc52"></script> He tells tales of being hunted by foreign agents (one of which shows up for the insane ending). When we finally see a new play Imogene writes, it’s all about her and her mother. Hmm, why not write about the nutso CIA guy?
Wiig’s woe-is-me waggishness is on a low burn here. The spark of “Bridesmaids” and delightful drollery she gave to small roles in “Ghost Town” and “Friends With Kids” is smothered under “Girl’s” blah-ness. She’s more inspired voicing a cute-funny spy in “Despicable Me 2.”
Bening and Dillon are equally misused, and the rest of the cast is frankly just annoying. Like Imogene’s early promise, “Girl Most Likely” is likely to be forgotten quickly. The sooner the better.