In a World Film Review | Sundance London 2013

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In A World… takes it’s title from the unforgettable catchline of the late Don LaFontaine, the
voice actor whose deep, thunderous delivery of said line became synonymous with the film
trailers and advertisements we know today. Over news footage of his passing and industry legacy
we are introduced to Carol Solomon (Writer, director and star Lake Bell), a struggling vocal
coach eeking out a career in the Los Angeles vocal performance community and attempting
to emerge from the shadow of her father ‘Sam Sotto’ (Fred Melamed of A Serious Man), the
current ‘King Of The Voiceover’ after LaFontaine’s death. When a major production company
decide to bring back the ‘in a world’ tag to promote their new fantasy blockbuster franchise
Carol decides to throw her hat into the ring of competition against her father and hideously
chauvinistic upstart Gustav Warner (Ken Marino). May the best voice win…

The brilliantly droll trailer for Jerry Seinfeld’s Comedian aside (Google it, trust me) the world of
film trailer voiceovers sound likes an unexpected and unlikely source for a comedy yet it proves
an inspired choice that owes a lot to the talents of it’s leading lady/helmer. In A World… toes
the line with a cliche triumph of the underdog story arc yet breathes fresh life into the formula
with it’s unique spin of genre tropes and uncanny industry insight. It’s a world where words
don’t just speak louder than actions; they are the action and Bell has a lot of fun with the daily
grind of voice artists, their obsessive commitments to their trade (Carol is constantly armed
with a tape recorder for capturing sound bites from various passersby) and even a hysterically
OTT Rocky style training montage. Fledging these ideas out to a 90 minute running time sounds
like an awful stretch but it’s a testament to not just Bell’s handling of the material but to her
central performance that it works as well as it does. Charm can be an easy word to throw around
but she quite frankly radiates the stuff. Carol faces down a lot of problems that seem recurrent
in comedies of this ilk (a fumbling romance with a sound designer is an amusing subplot) yet
Bell never allows her to be swamped by them or cowed into submission. She breezes across the
screen with an elegant but spikey energy that is infectious, spouting off an acerbic, un-PC wit
that gets laughs by the plenty. She’s ably supported by fellow performers, many of them her own
friends and fellow collaborators, who revel in the brilliant, partly improvised dialogue.

In A World… is not breaking any major new ground and if there are faults to be found it is when
the film strays closest to the formula it is gently ribbing. There are no major surprises to which
way Carol’s professional and romantic endeavours will play out and some may bemoan the
seemingly signposted turns her relationship with her father pop up, though frankly the chemistry
between Bell and the wonderfully bemused Melamed is a joy to watch. A climactic monologue
about the role of women in the industry and ‘finding your voice’ is admittedly quite on the nose
though frankly Bell deserves all the credit she gets for creating one of the most likeable leads of
recent memory and not bowing down to the dull and conformed roles that many actresses have to
submit to in the romcom genre. She picked up a Waldo Salt Screenwriting award for her work at
Sundance Utah earlier in the year and hopefully on the basis of this, it won’t be the last accolade
to come her way.

Touchy Feely Film Review | Sundance London 2013

Touchy FeelyWith a number of small breakout films (Humpday and Your Sister’s Sister the most recent) and an episode of Mad Men to her name Lynn Shelton is establishing quite the name for herself

on the American independent film circuit. Her latest work Touchy Feely brings together a cast

of established character actors for a comic drama concerning physical and spiritual health and

fragile family and emotional ties. The plot revolves around two middle aged siblings; Abby

(Rosemarie DeWitt), a carefree massage therapist and Paul (Josh Pais), an uptight and painfully

shy dentist. Both are unmarried; she is passionately in love with her new boyfriend (Scoot

McNairy), he is desperately clutching onto his relationship with his sullen daughter Jenny

(Ellen Page) who spends her time assisting her father at his steadily declining family dentistry.

Dynamics shift when shortly after her boyfriend asks her to move in with him, Abby becomes

completely physically adverse to human contact rendering her useless at her job and wracked

with self doubt. At the same time Paul finds that he is suddenly able to ‘cure’ his patients

crippling tooth pain with seemingly no effort at all…

 

Touchy Feely attempts to find laughs in what is fairly niche subject matter for comedy films.

The state of your soul and body is a pretty existential place to search for mirth but the film does

make a decent stab at it in its first acts. The performances radiate with a quiet, unfussy naturality

that you can only expect from such a fine ensemble of character actors. Rosemarie DeWitt in

particular is charming and appealing in the latest of small but winning performances including

the titular role in Rachel Getting Married and Josh Pais is great as melancholy personified.

His Paul shuffles, mumbles and grimaces through proceedings to terrifically funny and oddly

moving effect. It’s a role that incorporates a surprising amount of comic physicality into it but all

the better for it. The rare occasions when he manages to force a smile resemble some form of

nervous, childlike glee and he injects a much needed boost of life into the proceedings.

The main issue with the film is it’s elusiveness; everytime you try to close your hand around it

you catch nothing. Shelton’s typical style of character establishment first and improvisation on

behalf of her performers has done her well in the past when focusing on a small, tight band of

characters. Yet in her first ensemble, there’s simply too much for her loose freestyle aesthetic to

cover up. Are we meant to laugh at the portrayal of new age therapy or be in quiet awe of it’s

supposed restorative qualities? The plot threads appear to tie themselves up without getting into

much detail on the subject. We get a substantial supporting role from Allison Janey as Abby’s

fellow healer/confidante in what like and effort to get more of the concepts across but this is

too underplayed to have impact. Whatever you think of new age therapy yourself, watching the

characters fumble loosely with this for 90 or so minutes can’t keep the attention rapt. Matters

aren’t helped by an undercooked subplot concerning Jenny’s misjudged crush on Abby’s

boyfriend. A final act revelation seems to have wandered in unexpected from another film

altogether (although the scene is beautifully shot) and a bonding, out of body experience between

brother and sister seems terribly neat and convenient.

 

Shelton is a great talent and it’s good to see that her scope is expanding yet she needs to maintain

a firmer hand on her material and a balance between the humour and the maudlin in order not

to fall again into this frustratingly ‘grey area’ of tone. Hopefully this is merely a blip in her

otherwise impressive filmography.