

The Puffy Chair (2006 - Jay Duplass)
A very small budgeted indie that played at last year's Sundance Film Festival, The Puffy Chair is a modest success. A slacker named Josh (Mark Duplass) plans a road trip from Brooklyn to Atlanta in a rented van, stopping along the way to pick up a LazyBoy recliner he purchased on eBay, a birthday gift for his father - a replica of Dad's beloved chair from back when Josh was a small boy. He plans on going it alone, but an argument with his girlfriend Emily (Kathryn Aselton) the night before makes him invite her along for the ride. The first day out they stop at Josh's younger brother's house. Rhett is a bearded New Age hippie who likes to spend hours marveling at the activities of bugs in the garden. Of course he comes along on the trip too.
Very low-key character piece that has moments of comedy but tries to keep them based in a reality rather than an escelating series of outrageous misadventures. The three primary actors are pretty good, and the underlying core of emotional truth and realistic conversations, especially between Josh and Emily about their relationship, ring true. It was shot for almost no money with handheld video cameras, and quite frankly it shows. There are many times that the bumping around and losing focus is far too distracting and took me out of the moment, but even so it's not a reason to miss the movie. The Puffy Chair doesn't really have anything earth-shattering to reveal nor does it sail uncharted cinematic waters, but it's involving, has a few genuine laughs, the acting is good and it speaks just enough truth to recommend.
GRADE: B-

The Break-Up (2006 - Peyton Reed)
The Break-Up is a pretty good movie, though it isn't really the one being advertised. Vince Vaughn plays another fast-talking jerk, Gary, who owns a tour bus company in Chicago with his brothers. Jennifer Aniston is Brooke, an assistant at a famous artist's gallery downtown. In the opening scene we see their "meet cute" as the confident Gary picks her up at a Cubs game with his charming verbal gymnastics even as she sits with her boyfriend. From there we fast forward a couple years to find them a couple with a fancy condo. Brooke's frustrations over Gary's selfishness and inability to lend even the smallest amount of help on the simplest things ends in an argument, and she breaks up with him. Her not-too-bright plan is that the prospect of losing her will cause him to change more into the kind of person she wants. Gary of course misses this point completely, and soon they are trying to one-up the other in games intended to spark jealousy.
What could have followed was ever increasing wackiness in the ways they try to make the other person crazy, or on the darker side it could have even gone the route of The War of the Roses (1989). But The Break-Up doesn't really go either direction, which is actually refreshing. Most of the "comedy" is packed into the first part of the movie, and as it progresses it becomes much more dramatic. Not that it isn't still funny, it is, especially with Vince being Vince, but the way the script handles the emotions of these two characters has a kind of honesty that most "Romantic Comedies" only awkwardly tack onto the final reel after all the hijinx have been exhausted. It doesn't really say anything new about the nature of relationships, but it does say it well. If you go in looking for this year's Wedding Crashers, you may be disappointed. On the other hand, you may walk out of the theater satisfied that they tried something different and less simple. I did.
GRADE: B-
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"Film is a disease. When it infects your bloodstream it takes over as the number one hormone. It bosses the enzymes, directs the pineal gland, plays Iago to your psyche. As with heroin, the antidote to Film is more Film." - Frank Capra
"Film is a disease. When it infects your bloodstream it takes over as the number one hormone. It bosses the enzymes, directs the pineal gland, plays Iago to your psyche. As with heroin, the antidote to Film is more Film." - Frank Capra