The
Incredible Jessica James ** ½ / *****
Directed
by: James
C. Strouse.
Written
by: James
C. Strouse.
Starring:
Jessica
Williams (Jessica James), Chris O'Dowd (Boone), Noël Wells (Tasha), Lakeith
Stanfield (Damon), Megan Ketch (Melissa), Susan Heyward (Jerusa), Anne Carney (Mrs. Taggart), Taliyah
Whitaker (Shandra), Sarah Jones (Herself).
There is one reason to see The
Incredible Jessica James and that is its star Jessica Williams, best known for
her stint on The Daily Show, who here proves she can carry a movie on her
shoulders, and do so with ease. The only real downside is that you end up
wishing that the film itself have Williams anything really to do, or was about
just about anything. It’s a film you watch and enjoy for the most part, even as
you realize that the film doesn’t really have a reason to exist – doesn’t really
have a point of view, or anything to say. It’s just there as a showcase for
Williams – and it does that well. I just wish it did something, anything else.
The movie centers on the title
character, an African American woman in her mid-20s, who lives in Bushwick and
whose life revolves around the theater. She is a playwright – and although no
one seems all that interested in putting on her plays, she is undeterred. She
knows she will make it because, well, she has to. In the meantime, she teaches
theater to children and loves it. She has just broken up with her boyfriend
Damon (Lakeith Stanfield), but still obsesses over him. Her friend Tasha (Noel
Wells) decides she needs to start dating again – and fixes her up with Boone
(Chris O’Dowd) – a recently divorced man, who, like Jessica, is still obsessed
with his ex. They kinda of sorta start dating – but basically just make cute
banter in each other’s general direction.
The film is frustrating in many
small ways. The biggest one for me is I wanted to know something, anything
about the plays Jessica writes. At one point, she gives everything she has ever
written – in a large binder – to Boone to read, and all he says when he gives
it back is “You’re complicated”. What I wanted to know is what is she writing. Jessica talks about the
need to express herself constantly – and yet I never got the sense of what
precisely she feels so strongly that has to express it. My other larger problem
with the movie is an interlude mid-film where Jessica returns home to Ohio from
the big city – never a particularly good sign in a movie – which I found so
condensing to her family that I was annoyed – and happy that it ended so
quickly.
Williams though remains a delight
from beginning to end – even when she’s doing something completely irrelevant
to everything else – like an early dance sequence, where she simply walks
around dancing with such glee, it’s easy to not notice how forced he scene
feels. Chris O’Dowd does his Chris O’Dowd thing, which is more charming here
than most (although when Wells described him as no more than 30, I did a double
take). The kids at the Jessica’s writer’s workshop are also cute and funny.
I just kept expecting The
Incredible Jessica James to become something more – or really, become much of
anything. It’s one of those films you hear people raving about out of Sundance,
but when you see it six months later, you wonder why. The film is fine – it’s
cute and sweet, and Williams is a star. But there’s just not all that much here
beyond Williams – and that grows frustrating as the film moves along.
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