Michael Nordine “All happy families are alike,” claims the immortal first sentence of Leo Tolstoy’s “Anna Karenina”; “each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” And while jaded viewers may opine that all indie dramedies about dysfunctional families in the “Little Miss Sunshine” or “The Squid and the Whale” mold are alike, writer-director Haroula Rose’s “All Happy Families” suggests the genre has moved in a more grounded direction.
Whether that’s ultimately a better direction remains to be seen. The focal point of this particular family is Graham (Josh Radnor), an aspiring screenwriter/actor whose older brother Will (Rob Huebel) stars on a hugely popular (and seemingly terrible) TV series.
As Will surprises Graham by flying from Los Angeles to Chicago for an unannounced visit to the childhood home they bought together, their mother Sue (Becky Ann Baker) is trying to figure out how to react to her former boss touching her inappropriately at her retirement party, and their father Roy (John Ashton) may or may not be gambling again.
If that sounds like a lot, it’s only the tip of the iceberg: Graham recently reconnected with a college friend named Dana (Chandra Russell) who’s about to be his new tenant, Will’s teenage daughter (Ivy O’Brien) has just come out as trans, and Will himself is being cagey about the reason for his surprise homecoming.
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