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Results

 
 
Film Information
 

Plot: Two mismatched personal trainers' lives are upended by the actions of a new, wealthy client.
 
Release Date: 29th May 2015
 
Director(s): Andrew Bujalski
 
Cast: Guy Pearce, Cobie Smulders, Kevin Corrigan, Giovanni Ribisi, Brooklyn Decker and Anthony Michael Hall
 
BBFC Certificate: 15
 
Running Time: 104 mins
 
Country Of Origin: USA
 
Review By: Alex Moss
 
Film Genre:
 
Film Rating
 
 
 
 
 


 

Bottom Line


By no means an A+ but Results does enough to pass the test.


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Posted May 28, 2015 by

 
Film Review
 
 

A romantic Mumblecore comedy about the delusions sold to us by fitness freaks Results is a skew on the genre but manages to offer some smart observations. Having impressed with his last film Computer Chess Andrew Bujalski conjures an interesting, if slightly confused, metaphor for modern romance.

Danny (Kevin Corrigan) is a recently single, recently rich, always flabby loner. Desperate to change his life he signs up to a local gym run by fitness dreamer Trevor (Guy Pearce). Personal trainer Kat (Cobie Smulders) takes on Danny’s fitness regime but soon falls fowl to his advances before finding her relationship with Trevor increasingly strained. Can these three lonely, desperate and conflicted characters ever truly find happiness?

What Bujalski has to say with Results is often a smartly satirical look at the world of romance and health. That good eating and regular exercise don’t always lead to the happier life gym instructors promise. But at the same time money certainly doesn’t buy you happiness and just because you dream of something better it won’t always come true. It’s a cynical but brutally honest message and by the end, despite their flaws, you’re likely to have fallen quite heavily in love with the characters.

Corrigan is on cracking form as the loveable schlub who, while isolated in the world, seems to understand emotions better than anyone. He’s not always easy to identify with but when you do there’s genuine warmth he demands. Pearce, one of cinema’s more sporadically used leading men, brings a sense of motto-spewing nonsense to Trevor. A man who has seemingly read too many self-help books in such detail that their ideals have begun to conflict with each other culminating in a sense of naivety on his behalf. Pearce’s calm demeanor even when faced with hostility is one of the funniest components to the film. Smulders meanwhile demonstrates that her comedic chops from How I Met Your Mother mixed with her sterner, tough-girl role in the Marvel universe have only begun to scratch at the surface of what she is able to achieve as an actress. Here she finds a brilliant level of self-destructive anger packaged in a stubborn exterior that while not always attractive is never anything less than admirable.

The problems arise from Bujalski’s lack of any coherent plot and insistence to let much of the film meander along until what is an otherwise satisfying conclusion. Why else would you cast Giovanni Ribisi in such a throwaway role if you didn’t hope to find more story lying beneath an interesting concept? As such it offers an interesting point but takes too long to get there. By no means an A+ but Results does enough to pass the test.


Alex Moss Editor

 
Alex Moss’ obsession with film began the moment he witnessed the Alien burst forth from John Hurt’s stomach. It was perhaps ill-advised to witness this aged 6 but much like the beast within Hurt, he became infected by a parasite called ‘Movies’. Rarely away from his computer or a big screen, as he muses on Cinematic Deities, Alex is “more machine now than man. His mind is twisted and evil”. Email: alex.moss@filmjuice.com


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