This lo-fi Canadian dramady feels like an excursion into nothing much, as a vague college friendship is rekindled

Here is a toothless, aimless dramedy from Canada, a lo-fi excursion into nothing very interesting; it’s what would happen if Harry met Sally and maybe they weren’t meant to be lovers or even friends and were both a bit bland. Mara (Deragh Campbell) is married with a baby and teaches a creative writing class, and is astonished one day when her one-time platonic male best friend in college, or unresolved potential lover, impulsively shows up at the educational institution where she is employed. This is Matt, played by Matt Johnson (whom I last saw playing a wacky tech bro in Blackberry).

Matt is now a successful author; Mara isn’t. But it doesn’t stop them resuming their intimate, goofing-around friendship, which she keeps secret from her musician husband. Matt is allowed to be a guest speaker at Mara’s class and is weirdly vague and naive about Philip Roth, and it’s not clear if this is an intentional comic effect. Mara appears almost to want to have sex with Matt at his apartment one day and loses her nerve; there’s a kiss at Niagara Falls on their way to a creative writing convention but then Mara books them separate rooms at their hotel and Matt goes off with another woman; this makes Mara rejected and hurt and finally neither Matt nor Mara know what to do with their feelings, which are painful and real and yet also strangely tiresome and insipid.

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