The ever-lovinâ Bobby Cannavale enjoys a rare lead role in Ezra (now streaming on Paramount+), playing a struggling stand-up comic with a broken marriage, autistic son, daddy issues and anger issues in a drama with the occasional comedic flourish. Cannavale is one of those underappreciated role players who can kinda do it all (the strongest example of this? The Station Agent), so itâs nice to see him given a meaty and complicated character to play. Whether the rest of the movie â directed by Tony Goldwyn, who also has a supporting role â can meet Cannavaleâs level of earnest commitment is the question, though.
EZRA: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?
The Gist: Max Brandel (Cannavale) used to write jokes for other people, but now he does it for himself. Heâs the type of standup comic who sits on a stool with a glass of whiskey â neat â and gets confessional about his father, his son and his fatherhood. One night after a show, a woman from the audience buys him a drink and he takes her home and as soon as theyâre done one-night-standing, he sits on the edge of the bed sobbing. So she bolts, and on the way out, runs into Maxâs dad, Stan (Robert De Niro), who owns this home, and is fresh from his job as a doorman at a high-rise apartment building. âHe cried, didnât he?â Stan quips.
So whatâs up with Max? Is it the fact that he gave up a decent living â or lost it due to his anger issues, which might be more accurate â to do his own comedy thing and now has to live with his dad? Or that his marriage to Jenna (Rose Byrne) is as dead as last nightâs dinner? Or that his and Jennaâs son Ezra (William Fitzgerald) is autistic and on the verge of expulsion from public school due to his behavior? Well, itâs all of the above. And most of it pertains to Ezra, because his mother and teachers and advisers and doctors all want the boy to take medication and attend a special-needs school, and this is all stuff that Max doesnât want. Why? Well, Max believes the boy will be best served via assimilation into the ârealâ world, and worries that heâll grow up isolated. Legit concerns, for sure, but his reasoning seems flawed and outdated.
Max has his own issues. Heâs stubborn and heâs rash and impulsive and makes bad decisions, and a lot of that seems to be a product of his upbringing. His mother left, and Stan is the type of old-school toughster whose advice about dealing with anger is to âbury it.â That philosophy doesnât seem to be working: Max gets slapped with a restraining order after he lashes out at Ezraâs doctor. Max is one of those guys whose decisionmaking is, to put it bluntly, poor. And in an exercise in Making Everything Worse, Max sneaks into Jennaâs house and takes Ezra down the fire escape and drops him in the backseat of Stanâs vintage Cadillac convertible for a road trip. Max landed a standup gig on Jimmy Kimmel Live, see (his agent is played in a cameo by Whoopi Goldberg), and he has to get there by Friday or whatever. Thereâs nothing thatâll solve Movie Problems more than a road trip in a vintage convertible, right? Of course, what heâs doing is technically kidnapping. So thereâs that.Â
What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: Ezra is Rain Man crossed with the last movie in which De Niro played the grumpy father of a comedian, About My Father.
Performance Worth Watching: Cannavale can manage tricky dramedy tones as well as anyone in the biz. Weâd love to see him in more weighty roles, please.
Memorable Dialogue: Rainn Wilson plays an old pal of Maxâs, a doof who used to be a standup, and bursts with pride upon hearing about Maxâs Kimmel gig: âBest I did was get bumped from Arsenio. Worst night of my life. Hasselhoff segment ran long.â
Sex and Skin: None.
Our Take: Frustratingly, Ezra could be a thoughtful story about the complex relationship between fathers and sons who are trying to be themselves and change themselves and understand each other better, but the plot keeps getting in the way. Remove the contrivances and distractions inherent in a stereotypical Hollywood road trip â sideplotty detours via characters played by Wilson and Vera Farmiga, the inevitable scene where Ezra and Max see their own amber-alert report on a coffeeshop TV, Stan and Jenna hopping in the car to chase them to the Midwest â and you might have a good, solid character study instead of this well-meaning, but annoying collection of cliches.
Fitzgerald is excellent in a role that deals with Ezra’s issues as plot hurdles that need to be leapt — he loathes being physically touched, and he was mute for years but now speaks heavily in movie quotes — seems a little too much like a device for exploring the hows and whys of Maxâs many character flaws. The young actor has autism, and peripheral discussions of Ezra inevitably veer toward the need for the production to sensitively and accurately portray his character. Consider that successful, but the writing ultimately fails these characters. The screenplay, by Tony Spiridakis, drops in the implication that maybe Max, too, is on the spectrum and undiagnosed, a compelling development that the film briefly implies then ignores.
It also seems to ignore the fatal logical flaw that never occurs to Max, namely, that his big-break Kimmel appearance is never going to happen, because itâs a no-brainer bet that heâll be arrested before it happens. Perhaps he realizes this but never says it out loud; perhaps itâs less about the destination than what happens on the journey, whether itâs key bonding time with his boy or some time away from his fraught daily life, to think about whatâs best for himself and for Ezra. None of this is made clear in a movie that never seems to know what it wants to accomplish. It warms our hearts a little bit, sure, but its insights are muddled and ultimately banal.
Our Call: Part of me wants ye olde road-trip plot to meet a Thelma and Louise fate. Extract it from Ezra and youâd likely have a much smarter movie with more room to expand upon Cannavale and Fitzgeraldâs inspired performances. SKIP IT.
John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The post Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Ezra’ on Paramount+, in Which Bobby Cannavale Leads a Poignant Dramedy That Gets Lost on a Road Trip appeared first on Decider.