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Paper Man: movie review

Jeff Daniels plays a struggling writer who befriends a teenage girl in 鈥楶aper Man,鈥 a quirky, uneven drama.

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Myles Aronowitz/MPI Media Group/AP
In this photo, Emma Stone, left, and Jeff Daniels are shown in a scene from the movie, 'Paper Man.'

A while back Jeff Daniels starred in a movie about a fatuous egghead called 鈥The Answer Man,鈥 and now he鈥檚 playing a fatuous novelist in 鈥Paper Man.鈥 I can鈥檛 wait to see what his next 鈥淢an鈥 movie will be. 鈥淒igital Man,鈥 perhaps?

He鈥檚 playing Richard Dunn, the author of a well-reviewed but dismally uncommercial novel, who is struggling to make headway on a new book. He spends his time in a state of perpetual catatonia punctuated by fits of pique. His wife, Claire (Lisa Kudrow), a surgeon, seems like an eminently sensible type, which makes you wonder why she鈥檚 with this surly layabout in the first place.

When she engineers his wintertime transfer to a beach house in Montauk, Long Island, the hope is that the peace and quiet will kick-start the new novel. Instead, he hooks up with a local teenager, Abby (Emma Stone), who hires herself out to him as a baby sitter on the mistaken notion that he has a baby to sit. He, of course, is the big baby.

This setup has 鈥渜uirky鈥 written all over it. The co-writers and directors, Michele Mulroney and Kieran Mulroney, are the kind of filmmakers who think that, by piling on all the oddballs, they鈥檒l make a truly oddball movie. It doesn鈥檛 work that way. Less is often more, and, in addition to Richard and Emma, there鈥檚 also Emma鈥檚 abusive boyfriend (Hunter Parrish) and a puppyish cohort (Kieran Culkin) who, perhaps, inadvertently, seems more like a stalker than an admirer.

But the most egregious character is Captain Excellent (Ryan Reynolds, with close-cropped blondish hair), who has been Richard鈥檚 imaginary friend since the second grade. He pops up in his Spandex costume during those times when Richard needs aid and comfort. Whenever Captain Excellent shows up, the movie is definitely not excellent.

Did the filmmakers think that having him around would increase the kiddie demographic for this film? Or was it their way of cluing us in that Richard has never grown up? But we already knew this 鈥 and then some. The film鈥檚 only suspense is whether or not Richard鈥檚 platonic friendship with Abby will slide into something more. After all, she鈥檚 read his first book, cooks him soup... what鈥檚 left? In the one sequence in the film with any bite, the suspense is resolved, but the queasiness lingers.

I鈥檝e always liked Jeff Daniels, especially when he鈥檚 playing slightly daft characters (or more than slightly daft, as in 鈥Dumb and Dumber鈥). But his novelist here is a silly conceit. We don鈥檛 even get a real sense of what kind of writer Richard is, or even if he鈥檚 any good. It does make a difference, after all, if the novel he can鈥檛 write is worth writing. A bigger question: Was 鈥淧aper Man鈥 worth making? Captain Excellent and I would probably differ on that one. Grade: C- (Rated R for language and a scene of sexuality.)

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