M0vie Review by Matthew Schuchman
We all float through points in our lives, feeling incomplete. Some people think they can buy their way to fulfillment, while others seek a more spiritual journey. Jeff, Who Lives at Home, is the light-hearted tale of a family of three, as one day of awkward coincidences shines a light on their ever growing issues. Treated with a delicate touch by brothers Jay and Mark Duplass, Jeff, Who Lives at Home is a nice little slice of self-discovery pie.
Jeff (Jason Segel) is a 30 year old stoner who lives in his mother’s basement. In between toking bowls, he obsesses over the movie Signs. Jeff believes that everyone, like the characters in Signs, are receiving important messages every day, but no one is looking out for them. He knows he’s destined for great things; he’s just waiting for a signal to tell him what to do. When someone miss-dials and calls Jeff asking to speak to Kevin, Jeff sees it as his sign, but what does it mean? He tries to shake it off, but when he leaves the house at his mother’s request to buy wood glue to fix a broken shutter, Jeff beings to see more signs. These signs ultimately bring him in contact with his brother Pat, and Pat’s unhappy wife Linda, their mother, and a few bystanders. All of them become a part of this tale of chance.
There are people who are going to see this film, and automatically think it’s trying to say, “Watch for your signs.” In actuality, the characters are more like the slated wooden window shade that Jeff is supposed to fix. They’re well functioning, solid structures, who just need a little piece of them fixed. All of them are obviously affected by the death of Jeff and Pat’s father, but none of them searched their own hearts for a way to properly move on in the 17 years since he passed. While Jeff’s, coast through life attitude is nothing to be proud of, it’s his drive to find something that fixes the others, even if that wasn’t his intention.
Laughs and smiles are sprinkled through-out Jeff, Who Lives at Home. Fair amounts are provided through the script, and others from the general playfulness of Jason Segel and Ed Helms. The film does give them a chance to stretch their talent though and they have some terrific dramatic turns as the film nears its close. Both men have had their moments of tortured weakness on film, but they display a different level of emotion this time, and they do it well. The entire cast that includes Susan Sarandon, Judy Greer (Hollywood’s most under-appreciated genius), and (is that Rae Dawn Chong!?) Rae Dawn Chong, help pull together a nice little film that doesn’t oversell some common ideas in a new shell.
Tons of people think that films should be an escape, something to see, so they don’t have to think. While I think that is moronic, Jeff, Who Lives at Home, is the perfect medium between my train of thought, and theirs. It’s a lovely little piece that can work on a surface level if that’s all you want, but has more for those who want to dig.
Rating: 3 out of 5 ‘Staches
Thanks! Sounds like a good one to check out.