| Humpday (USA; 94
min.) directed by: Lynn Shelton starring: Mark Duplass; Joshua Leonard; Alycia Delmore |
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Jason says: "I haven't seen Lynn Shelton's first feature, but MY EFFORTLESS BRILLIANCE and HUMPDAYT form an interesting pattern, and not just in how both are kicked off by an old friend visiting unannounced. Unlike many female independent filmmakers who focus on making movies about women, Shelton opts to explore male relationships. |
| Michael says: "To say that HUMPDAY is Lynn Shelton’s indie answer to I LOVE YOU, MAN does indeed sell her film short, but I’m not one of the many people who are over the moon for HUMPDAY EITHER. There’s a lot to like in this examination of male friendship and one-upmanship, but I have some reservations as well. While some would praise Shelton on her depiction of a close relationship between straight guys, I would actually disagree with that assessment and focus more on her wonderfully, complex depiction of women in a predominantly male film. "When young married couple Ben and Anna are woken in the middle of the night by Ben’s college friend Andrew banging on their door, they have no idea what their relationship will go through in the coming days. Ben and Andrew shared a wild, anti-establishment youth, but their paths diverge as they lose touch with one another; Ben gets married and moves to the suburbs, and Andrew travels to exotic locales a continues to live a bohemian lifestyle. Naturally Ben feels mild jealousy at Ben’s free-spirited ways, but is defensive about his friends perception that he has become a big square. One night at a party with some artistic friends Andrew has recently made, the two friends find themselves bragging that they are going to enter a contest involving an amateur porn film. Their premise is to depict the two of them… two straight friends, having sex. "With their competitive history clearly established, it’s no surprise that the next, sobering day does little to bring the two ‘men’ to their senses as neither will back down before the other. As the scheduled day of filming draws closer we predictably discover that Ben is not as open-minded and free-spirited as he presents himself, and Ben is more complex than his buddy gives him credit for. But the real surprise, and the highlight of the film, is Anna, who surprises everyone with her sometimes surprising, always believable responses to the situations that arise. I would have preferred a film focusing on Anna personally, as the behavior of the two leads was mainly irritating for me, although admittedly it was occasionally funny. "I enjoyed Shelton’s naturalistic film-making style and handheld camerawork. The improvisational style of developing the script weakened the overall film in my opinion. In recent Q&A’s Shelton described a process that sounded similar to Mike Leigh’s method of script-development, but the two male leads lack the acting chops to make this process entirely successful. Jay Duplass particularly tries to rely on his good-natured, good-looking, everyman performance to pull him through this complex subject. Where Duplass is excellent is his hesitant, drawn-out attempts to have difficult discussions with his wife and his best friend. Those scenes are so incredibly awkward and filled with tension that I was actually giggling with delight at times. Joshua Leonard is amazingly annoying as Andrew, but his character is more fully-realized than Ben’s, and the actor sits more comfortably in his skin. And as I mentioned before, Alycia Delmore is outstanding as Anna. Without her this film would probably merit a cat or a cat and a half. Instead, I will give HUMPDAY 3 ½ cats" |