This Is Where I Leave You Review: Cast Has “Freewheeling” Chemistry, Yet Script Is Too Predictable

Posted: Published on September 18th, 2014

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

In theaters Friday, Sept. 19

2 1/2 stars (out of 4 stars)

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There's an early scene in this dramedy in which Jason Bateman, Tina Fey, Jane Fonda, Corey Stoll and Adam Driver sit in stony silence along a row of chairs in their suburban family home. In that brief moment, all you can do is marvel at the impressive array of talent in one frame. An Oscar winner! Emmy winners and nominees! A Juilliard grad! Then, within minutes, a young boy enters the room and throws his poop at them.

Aaaaaaaand we're already reduced to toilet humor.

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The Altmans have gathered together under strict orders: Dad has just passed, and his last wish, per his wife (Fonda), was for his four adult kids to observe the traditional seven-day Jewish mourning period under one roof. "You're all grounded!" Fonda admonishes to her brood. You're not wrong for thinking this set-up echoes 2013's August: Osage County. Except there's no incest here to speak of.

Not that this family doesn't have its special set of issues. At the outset, Bateman, playing a hotshot NYC radio show producer, learns that his wife is sleeping with his slimy boss-friend (Dax Shepard). And she's pregnant. He confides this secret only to his high-strung sister (Fey), who's grappling with her own jerk of a spouse. But wait, there's more! A lot more. Too much more.

Despite the appealing presence of four dysfunctional siblings and an overbearing matriarch, supporting characters are stuffed into virtually every room of the house. Connie Britton is wasted in a forgettable role of Driver's therapist girlfriend. (Even with professional credentials, she's the last to realize that her love is an aimless womanizer.) As Stoll's infertility-plagued wife, Kathryn Hahn embarrasses herself in a scene by climbing into bed with Bateman and begging him to father her baby. Rose Byrne so comedically resourceful in Neighbors has even less to do as the stock blue-collar hometown girl. She and Bateman catch up on old times in their first scene together, and audiences will correctly surmise that these two will soon hook it up. Not because they sizzle together; the script is just that predictable.

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This Is Where I Leave You Review: Cast Has "Freewheeling" Chemistry, Yet Script Is Too Predictable

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