"Goodrich" is clearly a labor of love that may please certain audiences and keep others away. Whenever Michael Keaton makes a non-superhero flick or something that is not a Beetlejuice sequel, audiences stay away. I am sure they may not be there for "Goodrich" which is a humorous drama but not something I would call a comedy - this is what people would call a dramedy. It is akin to mid-life crisis movies about older men who are no longer viable in today's world. This type of comedy-drama is nothing new of course, and it certainly brought audiences in when Tom Hanks did it as a grumpy old man in "A Man Called Otto." Only Keaton doesn't play a grumpy older man, simply a workaholic who has cast a blinding eye on his family.
Keaton is Andy Goodrich, an L.A. boutique gallery owner whose business is about to go kaput. The rent is too damn high and prospective clients showing their artwork are not coming out in full force. As if work wasn't stressful enough, Goodrich's wife is in a 90-day rehab due to prescription pill addiction (how apropos for our times, though one person does ask Andy if cocaine was the drug of choice). Andy is the only one unaware that his wife was popping pills because everyone else knows, including his older pregnant daughter, Grace, (Mila Kunis) and his younger 9-year-old daughter, Billie (Vivien Lyra Blair, a sprightly young tyke who played Leia in the "Obi-Wan Kenobi" series). There is no surprise there yet Goodrich wants to maintain the family unit, and have his wife back who wants to leave him. He doesn't understand what he did wrong or how he hasn't been there for Grace in the past due to supporting the gallery, travelling around the world, meeting artists, etc. He's never been home at night, and never around much during the day - the troubling absentee dad. Andy Goodrich has already been married once and now his second wife feels more secure in rehab than at home (she calls him from rehab after admitting herself without his help). The long-suffering wife is Naomie (Laura Benanti), who is sight unseen until almost the end and you wonder why she couldn't have been shown earlier. I understand she's at a rehab yet when Naomie appears, she is a 180 from the returned mailed letters and the distressed phone call that starts the film - I guess she recovered rather nicely.
The curious thing about "Goodrich" is that it lets Andy off the hook too easily. Michael Keaton is not playing a dad who is arrogant or too selfish - just simply a man who spent his life working on his job, not his family. It is the most disarming Michael Keaton performance I've ever seen and he plays Goodrich as a nice guy who works too hard (his biggest flaw is repeatedly mixing up the names of his daughters). Mila Kunis shows her anger at him in some choice moments, yet she's also amazed that he's showing an interest in her life. Then we get one too many scenes of part-time actor Terry (Michael Urie), who makes a pass at Andy, and he has a son who is a classmate of Andy's twin kids (Andy's other child is his son, Mose, played by debuting actor Jacob Kopera). Terry feels like an extraneous character who frequently sobs like a little child - he just seemed like an annoyance.
"Goodrich" is a harmless, sufficiently likable treat of a movie with an emotional finish that is hard to resist. Keaton and Kunis work in such remarkable unison and are so believable as father and daughter that you wish the movie was just squarely about them. Kunis's incandescent smile at her father after he calls her his soulmate is marvelous. It is a better mid-life crisis/Michael Keaton movie than "Birdman."








