
Ella McCay 1 star
I was looking for a movie one afternoon, so I was limited to matinees in nearby theaters. I settled on the new comedy Ella McCay by writer/director James Brooks. Brooks is known for such classic comedies as Broadcast News, Terms of Endearment and As Good As It Gets. Ella McCay includes some top actors like Jamie Lee Curtis, Woody Harrelson and Ayo Edebiri, so that seemed promising. Oh, how wrong that is! Most of the characters are one dimensional and involved in one ridiculous subplot after that are disconnected and go nowhere. The idea is that Ella McCay (Emma Mackey, who is the only mildly interesting character in the movie) is the youngest Lieutenant Governor ever in the state and she is about to get promoted to Interim Governor when the Governor (Albert Brooks) is tapped to become a member of the new administration’s cabinet. Ella has a passion for improvement of many issues that the state is facing and has some big plans. The problem is that she is a lousy campaigner and gives boring speeches. Her biggest problem is her messed up family that interferes in her life at the worst moments. Her father (Woody Harrelson) was fired over some sexual harassment claims (while he was married to Ella’s mother). Harrelson is not very funny and doesn’t appear in many scenes. Her husband (Jack Lowden) is a moron, and it has taken sixteen years of marriage for Ella to figure that out. Her younger brother, Casey (Spike Fearn) is agoraphobic, but is a sports betting genius and rich, but is afraid of how to approach his girlfriend (Ayo Edebiri, one bright spot in the whole mess). Lucky for Ella she has Aunt Helen (Jaimie Lee Curtis, in a wasted role) who always has good advice, if only Ella would listen. Rebecca Hall shows up only briefly as Ella’s mother before she quickly dies and disappears. Then there are the brief scenes with Kumail Nanjiani who is on Ella’s state police security detail. That’s another wasted talent. So poor Ella must deal with each crisis while she is supposed to be governing. It doesn’t take long before a scandal erupts. A nosey reporter is threatening to reveal that she has been having trysts with her husband on state property if she doesn’t give him what he wants. How scandalous! I found the whole thing to be boring and was hoping it would soon be over. There is also the matter of aging in the movie or lack of it. Mackey looks virtually the same when her character is sixteen as when she is thirty-four. Obviously, the budget didn’t allow much in the way of makeup or CGI effects. James Brooks has clearly not given this movie the effort he put into his earlier projects in the eighties and nineties. It looks like it is time for him to retire. Let’s hope that Emma Mackey finds some better roles soon. This is easily the worst movie I have seen this year.