★★
There’s something off about Paint, an eccentric movie through which Owen Wilson channels his internal Bob Ross. The premise of the film is a straightforward one, attention-grabbing sufficient to string the viewers alongside, however too uneven to maintain them engaged. Author and Director Brit McAdams straddles the road between being really bizarre and staying grounded, a flaw that provides Paint no room to develop. It’s continually caught in limbo, a irritating id disaster that hampers an in any other case attention-grabbing story.
Carl Nargle (Wilson) is Vermont Public Entry Tv’s number-one star. Each weekday, a whole bunch of individuals collect round their televisions and watch Carl’s hit present, Paint. As he spends his hour portray picturesque landscapes, his fanbase turns into mesmerized. His soothing tone and calm demeanor have nearly a super-human impact on the lots. With the station hurting for rankings, his showrunner (and ex-lover), Katherine (Michaela Watkins), decides so as to add a further hour of Paint after Carl’s, solely this time with a brand new and recent artist, Ambrosia (Ciara Renée). Ambrosia’s model of Paint is a recent tackle the hit present, and the general public begins to solid Carl Nargle apart.
This story has been informed earlier than, a profitable artist previous his prime struggles to seek out his glory years. In a manner, McAdams completely captures the tone and character of Carl Nargle. Any time Wilson’s character graces the display, the viewers can’t inform whether it is 1978 or 2015. This enables the supporting solid to sprinkle in little hints that we are literally residing within the current day, and the joke normally lands properly.
Though Paint appears to have rather a lot going for it, the movie by no means ties itself collectively. There are various moments when McAdams nearly crosses the road into absurdity, one thing that might have been welcome on prime of the in any other case dry setting. By getting proper as much as that time, lots of the humor leaves the viewers questioning, “why?” as a substitute of really producing any laughs. It’s very clear the place McAdams needed this film to go, it simply by no means will get there.
For individuals who grew up watching Bob Ross on Public Entry, it is a must-see. It actually captures the tone of a few of these movies, particularly early on, and does job satirizing the premise of a “native cable entry superstar.” But when the credit roll, viewers will undoubtedly really feel like one thing was lacking; Paint has coronary heart, comedy, drama, and romance, however doesn’t do any of those exceedingly properly.