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Hello I Must Be Going (R)
Genre: Romantic Comedy Drama
Directed by: Todd Louiso (The Marc Pease Experience)
Starring: Melanie Lynskey, Blythe Danner, Christopher Abbott, John Rubinstein, Julie White

Hello I Must Be Going (yes, it does have a connection to Groucho Marx’s song from Animal Crackers) is a pleasant little romantic comedy (with some degree of drama) that I confess I would like better without its grating indie-pop soundtrack. That’s not to say I didn’t like it, because I did — probably mostly for Melanie Lynskey, an actress who has rarely been given her due on the big screen. She started out on equal footing with Kate Winslet in Peter Jackson’s Heavenly Creatures (in my book, it’s still his most accomplished film) in 1994. But while Winslet’s career immediately took off, Lynskey’s has largely been relegated to supporting roles (right now you can see her in a small role in The Perks of Being a Wallflower). Well, here she has a film she can call her own — and she does. Though she has some solid support, this is every inch her movie.

Lynskey plays Amy Minsky, who at about 35 finds herself freshly divorced, utterly depressed and back home in Connecticut living with her upscale parents — her upscale, well-meaning, but rather clueless parents. Her father (TV actor John Rubinstein) is absorbed in his business and seems to see not much wrong with Amy lying in bed watching the Marx Brothers movies he shared with her as a child. (They both have splendid taste in the Marxes, sticking with their Paramount years.) Her mother (Blythe Danner) is somewhat more intent on pushing Amy back into the real world, but she has her own concerns involving redecorating the house and planning for an around-the-world trip with her husband as soon as he closes a certain deal and retires. That deal turns out to be what sets the plot — and Amy — in motion, thanks to a dinner with the other half of the deal and his family. It turns out that the family has a 19-year-old son, Jeremy (Christopher Abbott, Martha Marcy May Marlene), who may be the only person at the table with less desire to be there than Amy.

Not surprisingly — especially given the type of film this is — Amy and Jeremy end up drawn to each other and in no uncertain terms. In fact, it’s only after they’ve had sex that Amy learns that Jeremy is gay — or so his mother (Julie White, Shia La Beouf’s mom in the Transformers pictures) thinks. Just why his mother thinks this seems to be grounded in him having successfully played a gay man in a play (that he’s now down to play Walt Whitman perhaps seals the deal). It’s actually doubtful that Jeremy knows just what he is, but he does know that he connects with Amy and that he doesn’t — despite what his mother believes — want to be an actor. The problem with all this isn’t just that Amy has qualms about the difference in their ages, but because their relationship could ruin her father’s business deal.

What follows is good-natured, good-hearted and, yeah, somewhat cut to fit the rom-com pattern, but neither unpleasantly so, nor unrealistically. There are undercurrents to the story that keep it always believable and engaging. (It’s refreshing that a film can actually realize that a 35-year-old has every right to behave in a manner usually attributed to much younger characters.) And while the film has nothing similar stylistically or in terms of dialogue, it’s nice to encounter an ending that Woody Allen might have approved of. Much of the thrust of the film is really contained in the lyrics of the Bert Kalmar-Harry Ruby song from which the film takes its title. (That, too, is Allenesque. Allen used the song over the opening credits of Whatever Works in 2009.) Although we only hear it once in the course of the film, its words seem to apply to every aspect of Amy’s life — her marriage, her sojourn with her parents and maybe her romance with Jeremy. Rom-coms are rarely like this. Rated R for language and sexual content.

Starts Friday at Carolina Asheville Cinema 14


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I don’t remember Christopher Abbot in Martha Marcy May Marlene but hes great in Lena Dunhams Girls.

Me

Oct 23, 2012
at 7:12 PM


I don’t remember Christopher Abbot in Martha Marcy May Marlene

Neither do I, but I’ve expended a lot of energy trying to forget I ever saw it.

Ken Hanke

Oct 24, 2012
at 8:33 PM


Great film “never forget”.

Me

Oct 25, 2012
at 8:17 PM


Martha May a great film? Well, it made my worst of the year list. I think we disagree.

Ken Hanke

Oct 25, 2012
at 9:21 AM


Its funny that you’ve changed your tune and its possibly one of the best of all the recent emergence of films about cults.  Also its a 2011 film not 2012.

Me

Oct 26, 2012
at 2:39 PM


possibly one of the best of all the recent emergence of films about cults

I’d love to see that on a DVD box, even though I have no idea what this apparent spate of movies about cults is.

And I didn’t change my tune. I am on record as disliking the film from day one, but even if I had…there is no law locking anyone in to a first reaction after further consideration. And who said it was a 2012 film movie?

Ken Hanke

Oct 27, 2012
at 1:26 AM


</b>...its possibly one of the best of all the recent emergence of films about cults.</b>

There hasn’t been a good film about cults since ROSEMARY’S BABY.

Edwin Arnaudin

Oct 27, 2012
at 7:12 AM


Well, The Ninth Gste would work for me.

Ken Hanke

Oct 27, 2012
at 9:51 AM


Also The Master would work for me.

Me

Oct 27, 2012
at 2:08 PM


I didn’t see it on your 2011 list.

Your original rating was 2.5 which i took as lukewarm.

No locking law at all but some of the best films are the ones that aren’t critically received at first.

Me

Oct 27, 2012
at 2:15 PM


some of the best films are the ones that aren’t critically received at first.

And some of the most fawned over are among the worst.

Ken Hanke

Oct 27, 2012
at 6:47 PM


Departs our realm on Friday.

Ken Hanke

Oct 30, 2012
at 7:05 PM


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