
Steve Martin served as executive producer, screenwriter, and star of LA Story, a jaded and ultra hip look at the very unique counterculture known as Los Angeles and some of its bizarre inhabitants, combined with some whimsical touches of fantasy that don't always jive with the cynicism of the rest of the story, resulting in an ultimately uneven cinematic experience.

Harris Telemacher (Martin) is a "wacky" weatherman who is dealing not only with discontentment from his work but navigating some choppy relationship waters with his current bitchy girlfriend (Marilu Henner), a ditzy clothing store employee (Sarah Jessica Parker) who is going to "Spokesmodel" School, and an English reporter named Sarah (Victoria Tennant) who dresses like a Greenwich Village Bohemian and plays the tuba in her spare time. He also finds himself getting career and relationship advice from a California freeway billboard that communicates with him.

Martin's screenplay is smart, almost too smart in that it touches on a lot of things that are exclusive to large cities like Los Angeles and New York, making it seem like Mr. & Mrs. Middle America were not the intended demographic here. There are a lot of "inside" jokes inserted in the script that might be just a little too inside for Joe Q. Public, but there is enough stuff included that we can all laugh at, like watching the large dinner party where everyone orders coffee, the full service gas station. or the credit check required to get dinner reservations that we find ourselves initially drawn into what's going on.

Unfortunately, it turns out that the character of Sarah is supposed be our guide, the outsider looking in at the crazy world that is LA and it is through her that we are supposed to relate to what's going on, but it becomes hard to sustain because Sarah is just not that interesting a character and it becomes even more complicated when it turns out that Sarah is the one that Harris really wants to be with but as the story progresses we just have to wonder why. Martin and Tennant, who first starred together in All of Me (and eventually married IRL), where they achieved some semblance of chemistry just didn't have it here...Martin wrote the character of Sarah on the assumption that Tennant was in possession of some sort of comic timing or instinct, but she really was not and when the character who is supposed to link us to the rest of the film doesn't really work, it makes it hard to sustain interest in her or her relationship with Harris.

Mick Jackson's direction is intricate and detail-oriented and Martin manages to keep his character likable but the lack of chemistry with Tennant and her lack of comic timing really make large chunks of this film very hard going.
Last edited by Gideon58; 06-03-23 at 01:29 PM.