



Any team-up of one of the cinema’s most enduring off-camera couples, Kyra Sedgwick and Kevin Bacon, should be cherished. They’re both so very good and “natural” doesn’t begin to describe their onscreen chemistry together. They’re as close as Hollywood gets to a Lunt & Fontanne, these days.
And if their latest film outing as a couple, “The Best You Can,” isn’t all it might have been, they’re still grand in it.
It’s a lurching, cloying and uneven romance that folds in a lot of drama — some of it organic, much of it contrived — as it tosses in the odd tone-deaf scene, moment or performance.
Written and directed by sitcom vet Michael J. Weithorn (“The King of Queens”), it bears the trademark of sitcom writer/creators adapting to the big screen. A TV season’s clutter of characters and situations and story arcs are crammed into a 100 minute film.
Sedgwick plays Cynthia, a New York urologist finally facing the end game of marrying an older spouse. Warren Rand (Judd Hirsch) was a legal tyro in his day, a government attorney who held Nixon and his criminal crew accountable for Watergate. Now, he’s forgetting things, having “episodes. He’ll gregariously go to the wrong table in a restaurant and continue an earlier conversation or anecdote — sometimes from MUCH earlier — with strangers.
“He’s older than me,” 60something Cynthia keeps telling folks. “Older than most people.”
The 25 or so year age difference is taking its toll and rattling her.
Bacon plays Stan, an ex-cop and divorced dad coping with his first blast of prostate issues. His constant need for pee breaks makes his night patrolman for a home security company job an ordeal. And that’s not going to make his casual sex and sexting affair with a cashier (Olivia Luccardi) with a “hot old guy thing” any easier.
Cynthia meets Stan when somebody tries to break into the Rands’ townhouse. The way she chatters away tells us she’s a bit rattled, and maybe grateful to have a conversation with somebody who can stay on topic. She babbles on even after Stan begs to use their bathroom.
Yes, the urologist asks him to “call my office.” Yes, there’s an exam. But an informal friendship blooms from this unlikely meet up. They have the same birthday, and now each has a contemporary to talk to.
The text chats are intimate without intimacy. They share jokes about “fragile” Gen Z, as he has a troubled but talented daughter (Brittany O’Grady). She shares her efforts to get her husband to write a book about his colorful life while he still can, hiring a grad student researcher, with Warren able to remember a lot even as he forgets they’re “working” and wanders off.
It’s all very sweet and innocent. How long can that last?
Weithorn shoehorns in lines, dialogue exchanges, characters and situations you usually see in broadly played sitcoms — a lurch or two into sex talk, a two couples dinner conversation in a restaurant that turns to “My first time” — a sitcommy/joky “consulation” with an old colleague (Ray Romano) who is so tactless in discussing her husband’s dementia that you’d swear he’s a surgeon and not a neurologist.
But there are still lovely moments — Cynthia hiring a nurse (Meer Rohit Kumhbani) whose compassion extends to letting Warren tell her his life story, for posterity, hot-tempered Stan finally “hearing” his nervous, afraid of performing daughter and doing something more than play his ukulele in support.
The picture is — like life itself once you’ve gotten that “Welcome” letter from the AARP — a mixed bag. The supporting characters are less fleshed-out, so much so that when Stan’s daughter shows us her many “triggers,” we scratch our head.
And when Luccardi’s gum-snapping 20something throws her “hot old guy” thing out there, it plays like it sounds — like an older screenwriter’s male wish fulfillment fantasy.
But Bacon plays a little and sings a little, Sedgwick handles jokes and pathos and in the scenes that count and turns “professional” in a heartbeat. And each gets across a shared empathy and humanity that bridges any gap in class and life experience.
They’re the reasons to watch “The Best You Can.” The writer director? Well, let’s just hope this wasn’t his “best.”
Rating: R, sexual situations, some drug use, profanity
Cast: Kyra Sedgwick, Kevin Bacon, Brittany O’Grady, Olivia Luccardi, Meera Rohit Kumbhani, Ray Romano and Judd Hirsch
Credits: Directed by Michael J. Weithorn. A Sony Pictures release on Netflix.
Running time: 1:43































