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Liberal Arts Reviewed by Ryan Adams on January 3rd, 2013 Icon presents a film directed by Josh Radnor Screenplay by Josh Radnor Starring: Josh Radnor, Elizabeth Olsen, Richard Jenkins, Allison Janney and Zac Efron Running Time: 97 minutes Rating: PG Released: December 20th 2012 |
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Jesse
Fisher (Josh Radnor) is invited to see his old college professor, Peter
Hoberg
(Richard Jenkins) retire and give his closing speech at Liberal Arts
College.
While at the retirement party he meets the beautiful, young, Zibby
(Elizabeth
Olsen). The pair immediately hit it off but while their passion
continues to
blossom it becomes evident that the distance and age between them could
make or
break the couple. Where to start, first off this movie is directed by Josh Radnor, it’s also written by Josh Radnor, produced by Josh Radnor and starring, yep you guessed it, Josh Radnor. Just like Inception it’s a Radnor within a Radnor and that’s my main issue with Liberal Arts: it’s just so self-indulgent. Radnor, the rad for short, is so assured of himself in real life that he just comes off a little too conceded. The dialogue is unrealistic between Radnor and Olsen. She is a college student not a professor with a degree in the English language.
I hate getting film critic in my reviews, I like to talk to the reader like they are my friend but Josh Radnor doesn’t seem to know how to direct a movie either. I found myself being shocked when he would break first rules of angles, choosing quantity over quality. There were numerous times that extras were in scene after scene where it would have been physically impossible for them to have made that distance in so little time. Liberal Arts is filled with edits that didn’t seem to connect up to the script taking me completely out of the movie and making me think what the heck just happened. I can understand that this is his second movie, but I would had hoped that he would have had lessons in the art before using his fame to make movies.
While
it is almost a complete failure in my eyes there was a glimmer of hope
in the
extended cameo of Zack Efron as the hippy stoner Nat. Efron’s acting
lit up the
audience, bringing me out of my daze and throwing in a couple of
chuckles. Yet
again I found myself more intrigued in to what his character was up to,
even if
his screen time was no longer than 5 minutes. It can’t be a good thing
when you
write a movie and accidently make the supporting cast is more
entertaining than
the main storyline. Is it possible that Josh Radnor is a genius and
committed
the crime on purpose? I doubt it! Liberal Arts
comes off as an indie movie trying too hard to be an indie movie.
Making it too
quirky and unique just made it more weird and unoriginal. This is one
movie I
really wanted to walk out on yet little things like Efron made me stay. |