American films overflow with arrest-development cases. (There is a lot of American about it.) Yet it is not every day that you see an attractive indies about “adult”-that is, a certain age vessels who are still sealing inside the young bubble
Smart and Fluki “Sakramanto“It is that kind of film. It is called a road comedy, and technically it is, if you are counted as a film as a film, with two main characters old friends, who can no longer be like each other, who climb in a vintage gold Chrisler Imperial – who shared all the time, and a journey from La to Sacrament She takes
Why are they going there? It seems that it can be a mumblecore glow on “a real pain” (however, given the change in generation, we should revive it and resume the time-like style, which it is a chip), Glenn (Michael Sera), Who lives in LA, Nerdish is a conservative settlement, and Ricky (Michael Angarano), his oldest and closest friend, who shows from anywhere, is a careless friend, who has refused to grow in a fast-fried and even a state.
For the beginning, he is a pathological false. Ricky convinced Glenn to go on a journey, explaining that his father had died a month ago, and he wants to go to Sacramento to spread his father’s ash into the sea. There are just some problems with that story. Sacramento is not near the ocean. And when they stop at a feature store, Ricky quickly empties a canister of tennis balls and fills it with dirt – his father’s “ash”.
Hence the entire journey is based on a false hypocrisy. But Glenn, honest one, is not even clear. He did not even tell Ricky that his wife Rosie was played without any rubbish Kristen StewartEight months pregnant. (Ricky, spotting the edges of a cradle in the backyard, discovered it.) And while Rosie may not be cold about it, Glenn is coming out. Certainly, this is what the father-to-B (and perhaps has always done), but in “Sacramento” it is that Glenn is likely to become a voice of a daddy like an adult Olympics. She is a good millennium husband, dotting and vigilant, but where it’s not all heading Real Him. And this is giving him a stunned nervous breakdown.
Then what he is afraid of is true: he loses his job (it seems that he works for a tech company, which has a major sorting). Welcome to adult 2.0.
In addition to giving a spiked, compelling performance as Ricky, the film’s Kiran Kulikin, a fast-speaking batsman-sect, as well as a real pain, a Michael Angarano directed and co-written as a sum of “Saranto”. And he proves to be a confident and lively filmmaker, although in an attractive and almost random way. He does not broadly does not thank the cute road-movie episodes (thank God). He wants to show us who these two friends are-a mixture of his oldest-in-world intimacy, fermentation-in-scriptism, and sheer irresponsibility. Once they reach Sacramento, they stop at once and join with some women (AJ Mendez and Iman Karam), who owner and operate a fighting gym, and we get the taste in such a way that both of them used to use around Tomkat, perhaps competing for the same women, all gave fuel to their competitive camera.
But all this is only indifferent brother. Why are they here now? Because Ricky, it turns out, he has a child of his own, and has not started himself to be a father. She was granting bail on the child’s mother, Talli (Maya Arskin), and is not even sure that she wants around her. (That he has rights It does not happen to him.) This is an adult apocalypse. And to get it through it, Ricky and Glenn need to do, each other’s misfit to paw down in itself.
Angarano has a showpiece role, but it is Sera that proves itself, more than ever, to be a prominent actor. First, when you see her in your patch beard, you think he is just playing a few old versions of Michael Sera of Old. But he now has less derivative, more vested appearance, and he is doing something more courageous. He creates a character that makes a character lameing for pain and happiness. Michael Sera has now been knocking around TV and Indie World for years, but if Hollywood still wants to make real films, then it can be a major place for it.