“I feel we have to name it,” Tess (Laura Dern) tells Alex (Will Arnett), standing over the lavatory sink whereas brushing her tooth, a critical ask embedded in a second of profound mundanity. She’s referring to their marriage, which, greater than 20 years in and with two babies between them, has run its course. Tess, a former Olympic volleyball participant, and Alex won’t be sad with their marriage, however they’re actually not completely happy in their marriage, or in their very own lives creatively or professionally. Their break up spurs Alex’s unconventional midlife disaster, one with out fancy muscle automobiles or a sizzling younger babe on the arm.
That disaster is the inspiration of Bradley Cooper’s blandly reassuring, at instances tedious and tunnel-visioned new directorial effort “Is This Factor On?” That midlife disaster additionally includes a hairpin profession pivot, and no, I’m not speaking about Cooper’s transfer into directing, beginning with 2018’s Oscar-winning “A Star Is Born,” then the handsomely staged, Oscar-bait Leonard Bernstein biopic “Maestro” two years in the past.
That pivot is in Alex’s sudden transfer towards turning into an beginner stand-up comedian, utilizing the stage and the microphone as remedy platforms for his anguish. (However is it anguish he’s feeling pre-divorce? He doesn’t register a lot on the emotional Richter scale.) He stumbles into the Olive Tree Cafe within the West Village and, certain, why the hell not, what do I’ve to lose, indicators as much as carry out nearly as a lark, however his comedy turns into one thing the film intends to endorse as being profitable or humorous, even when that’s not all the time the case for these within the viewers for this movie. For a movie about comedy as a part of its elevator pitch, “Is This Factor On?” is curiously unfunny, with Cooper preferring to linger on the movie’s melancholy, “Marriage Story”-lite core as Alex and Tess finally, by way of a little bit of film magic within the form of a screenplay, discover their approach again to one another.
However the common form of “Is This Factor On?” relies on a real story that would appear contrived had been it not actual. A few many years in the past, the English comic John Bishop (who will get a “story by” credit score right here, together with Cooper’s co-writers Will Arnett and Mark Chappell) was working as a pharmaceutical rep, his marriage imploding, when he tried open-mic standup to keep away from paying the institution’s entry payment. And now have a look at him: Since then, he’s created a number of BBC One sequence. Maybe additionally like this movie’s director, each John and the fictional character of Alex discovered what they found to be their more true calling later in life.
Alex and Tessa’s buddy group, in the meantime, is one in all blended ambitions. There’s Christine (Andra Day) and her seemingly completely stoned-to-the-gills actor husband Balls (Cooper himself, and, sure, that is sadly the character’s title), who’re staring down the barrel of their very own empty nest and a wedding that’s pushing up in opposition to its expiration date. Cooper winds up giving himself the vast majority of the laughs, like when he suspects Alex could be seeing somebody new. Alex says, “I’ve been doing standup.” Balls goes, “Is that her deal with?”

Cooper, once more working with cinematographer Matthew Libatique (who cameos as a comic book within the Olive Tree Café), operates the digital camera himself, which seems to create a much less seen phantasm of immediacy or intimacy, with the 1.66:1 facet ratio giving the movie the bodily dimensions of a European character examine. The value of Cooper taking the digital camera into his personal arms, regardless of how carefully he smooshes it onto his actors’ faces, is self-indulgence. There are takes that drag on and on (corresponding to one in all Dern biting right into a weed cookie, and we are supposed to surprise if maybe the digital camera crew had been slowed to molasses by an edible as properly) and will have used extra editorial self-discipline from editor Charlie Greene. “Is This Factor On?” very a lot has a “let’s let the cameras roll and catch lightning in a bottle!” really feel, with Cooper falling maybe slightly bit too in love with the performances to rein in his naturalistic impulses. The actors listed below are predictably sturdy, with a swept-back, Cooper-coded Arnett digging into what is probably going essentially the most dramatic materials of his profession.
However “Is This Factor On?” feels prefer it doesn’t actually get going till hour two — and people lengthy takes can really feel like gaping maws of silence that depart you begging for music or a rating to be inserted in order to a minimum of level you within the route of feeling one thing. The primary scene wherein you begin to really feel like, ah, sure, there’s some spark beneath the hood right here includes Alex scrambling to get his children a sitter— he finally leans on his mother and father, performed by Christine Ebersole and Ciarán Hinds, and their seemingly dysfunction-free marriage slightly an excessive amount of amid the separation — in order that he can take one other standup gig. That exact same night time, Tess is on what seems to be a date with a buddy who’s lately single, and so they occur to go to that very comedy membership Alex is performing in. Throughout his set, he goes into beautiful, vivisecting element in regards to the intricacies of his marriage breakup. You see the frisson, the lust even, flash throughout Tess’ face, electrified by his candor, maybe giving her a glimpse of the Alex she as soon as knew, the Tess she as soon as was.
All of this actually occurred to John Bishop, who ended up on reconciliation’s approach together with his spouse after she noticed his personal soul-bared open-mic efficiency. So, too, do Alex and Tess begin to discover their approach again to show different, beginning up what I suppose you’d name an affair, as they’re maintaining the connection a secret from their children and their buddies whereas Alex continues to dwell in a bachelor pad, with Tess of their upstate residence whereas dreaming of turning into a volleyball coach as a approach again into her previous sport. What makes “Is This Factor On?” work when it does is the chemistry alternate taking place between Arnett and Dern, who’re adept at going at it one minute after which making out the following. Not that Cooper’s movie is by any means some form of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” nor does it have the requisite throwdown mood tantrum on the extent of “Marriage Story.”
Frankly, this movie may have used one. It by no means looks like there’s any form of catharsis, any launch on the finish of the crescendo, aside from one taped on with a youngsters’s chorus-led cowl of Queen and David Bowie’s “Below Stress,” a track that all the time provides you that feeling of “I wish to run towards my future.”
Although usually torpid and listless, “Is This Factor On?” does fire up a vivid portrait of the New York Metropolis underground comedy milieu, even when New York Metropolis as a personality feels extra just like the afterthought it isn’t purported to be. Cooper casts precise comedians in roles, from Amy Sedaris because the membership’s peppy emcee to a dry-as-a-bone Jordan Jensen as Alex’s first sexual accomplice post-divorce. However his dedication to naturalism and immersion takes a bit out of your soul after what looks like a really lengthy 124 minutes; it may’ve used extra spring in its step. Isn’t joie de vivre what a midlife disaster is all about?
Grade: C+
“Is This Factor On?” premiered on the New York Movie Pageant. Searchlight Footage will launch the movie on Friday, December 19.