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Sundance 2012 Review: Josh Radnor Grows Up Alongside His ‘Liberal Arts’

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Triple threat Josh Radnor‘s first feature, happythankyoumoreplease, debuted at Sundance in 2010, hitting big with the crowds and ultimately winning the Audience Award. The film was written and directed by Radnor, who also starred in it as a disaffected twentysomething struggling to make meaningful connections with others in big, bad New York City. Radnor’s latest outing, Liberal Arts, is written and directed by Radnor, and stars the multi-hyphenate as– well, you probably know the rest. But while happythankyoumoreplease was perhaps too much of a classic first feature – complete with twee touches and too much coincidence and not enough of the sort of things that happen in the real world – Liberal Arts sees Radnor and his craft maturing wonderfully, which is startlingly in-line with the aims of the actual film.

Radnor stars as perhaps an older, mid-thirties cousin of happythankyoumoreplease‘s Sam Wexler. His Jesse Fisher is consumed with books, and his affection for printed reading material perhaps eclipses his affection for anything (and anyone) else. That’s probably why Jesse is (both unoriginally and still quite believably) unsatisfied with his current life state. His job as a college admissions counselor means that Jesse comes equipped with a few conversational ticks that he might not even be fully aware of possessing (though Radnor the writer certainly is). He’s interested in people, but most of his questions seem rehearsed and leading, meant to disarm those he is asking while not revealing much about himself. And that’s certainly no way to go through life.

Invited back to his alma mater for a weekend by his favorite professor (Richard Jenkins, solid as ever), Jesse reverts back to his college self, in terms of both of his maturity level and his passion for things in his life. Returning to academia (if even for a little bit) plunges Jesse back into college life – complete with hyperbolic statements, dramatics, discovery, and new friends. Well, you know, new friends, including Elizabeth Olsen as the exuberant and knowledgeable Zibby, who Jesse enters into a halting relationship with. The two embark on an old-fashioned courtship – the kind with exchanged mix CDs and handwritten letters. But how can Jesse ever grow up when he’s fascinated by someone sixteen years his junior?

Happythankyoumoreplease and Liberal Arts are both concerned with making connections in the modern world, and both center on protagonists who believe that those connections will help them grow up into the adults they feel they somehow should already be. Jesse is unsatisfied both with his life and with himself, but Radnor’s treatment of an early on-set mid-life crisis is more refined than it was in his previous work, and less glossed over with twee touches that seem unrealistic and detrimental to real growth. Liberal Arts is a film about growing up and how that can be scary, but how it is essential and ultimately good. It’s a fine and appropriate message for a sophomore feature, and one that Radnor does extremely well by.

The Upside: Liberal Arts shows great growth in Radnor’s filmmaking and acting, and is frequently quite charming and genuinely humorous, with great heart. Radnor clearly has passion and affection for the films he makes, and that continues to shine through.

The Downside: Radnor’s film still has twee touches that, like those in happythankyoumoreplease, will likely annoy on repeated viewings. Certain elements are a big too precious and convenient.

On the Side: Liberal Arts was filmed on location at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, Josh Radnor’s actual alma mater.

 

Snuggle up with the rest of our Sundance 2012 coverage


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