By Canadian Press on September 3, 2025.
There are all kinds of movies that are either endangered or practically extinct. The big-studio comedy. The original musical. But the sweet and shaggy regular-people movie â more a province of the 1970s, always one that required a little hunting down â is a particularly rare breed.
âBaltimoronsâ is one of those little movies you might stumble across and be surprised that it hooks you. It does so despite â or more likely because â of its complete lack of flashiness or any self-evident attempt to âhook you.â Instead, it manages that simply with low-key charm and a warm, unpretentious humanity.
Director Jay Duplassâ film is about a young Baltimore man in recovery for two things. Cliff (Michael Strassner) has quit both drinking and improv comedy. If âyes, andâ had been his personal mantra, heâs now, after a failed suicide attempt seen in the movieâs first moments, pledged to give up both for his girlfriend, Brittany (Olivia Luccardi).
It doesnât take us long to grasp that this state of affairs is trying for Cliff, a gregarious and easygoing guy, but an aimless one. The alcohol isnât so much the problem, though. More difficult is going cold turkey on riffing his way through life.
On Christmas Eve, while Cliff is heading to Brittanyâs family home for a holiday celebration, he trips and chips his tooth. With most dentist offices closed, he ends up at the door of Didi (Liz Larsen). Their interactions are, at first, awkward. Cliff is informal and prying; Didi, many years his senior, is more official. As a partner for Cliffâs eager conversation, Didi, a woman with a defeated, just-getting-through-the-day, middle-aged melancholy, would seem about the least genial match.
But each gets little windows into the otherâs life. Didi, divorced, learns her daughter wonât be with her that evening â a phone call overheard by Cliff. And when the dental work is done, Cliff realizes his car has been towed. Didi reluctantly offers a ride, and, from there, the two end up on an unlikely Christmas Eve odyssey together, without the supernatural qualities of Dickens but nevertheless with ghosts from the past along the way, such as Didiâs ex-husband and Cliffâs former improv troupe (named The Baltimorons).
âRom-comâ or âMay-December romanceâ would be reasonable labels to put on Duplassâ film, written by him and Strassner. But part of the freewheeling charm of the film is that it doesnât try to define the relationship that evolves during its lightly paced night. These are just a couple of people (both actors are wonderfully natural) a bit disappointed by life, who find each other at the right time.
Jay Duplass and his brother, Mark Duplass (a producer here), first made their mark in the early â00s with micro-budget comedies like âThe Puffy Chair.â âThe Baltimorons,â though, doesnât feel like it’s trying to shake up the movie industry. Like its characters, it’s just trying to get by, and maybe find a little companionship along the way.
âThe Baltimorons,â an Independent Film Company release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for language. Running time: 100 minutes. Three stars out of four.
Jake Coyle, The Associated Press