Mr. Roosevelt

At any given moment in Mr. Roosevelt, Noël Wells is a frazzled powder keg, fuse lit and ready to blow. The question is what her imminent detonation will look like. She might go full-on berserk and indiscriminately chew out anyone fool enough to register on her scorn radar. She might instead fall under the spell of a crying fit, weeping with abandon in public spaces, immune to the stares and chagrin of strangers and acquaintances alike. She isn’t prickly, just a tad unstable, but that’s okay. If your ex called you in the middle of awkward sex with a stranger to inform you that your cat died, you probably wouldn’t wind up in a good headspace, either.
There’s more to Wells’ journey than that, of course. Her character, struggling comedienne Emily, is summoned back to Austin by her former beau, Eric (Nick Thune), to pay her last respects to the kitty of the title, a fluffy orange tabby we see only in flashbacks and in photos. Adding insult to injury, Eric invites Emily to stay at the house they once cohabitated, and which he now shares with his new girlfriend, Celeste (Britt Lower). Celeste is cool, stylish and has her life on track. Emily, by contrast, is best known for a viral video where she bathes in a tub full of spaghetti. It’s one thing to break up with a person. It’s another to see how the life you once made with them has been completely overridden by another person. The crusty old living room carpet is gone; the house is an airy, bright replication of an HGTV home makeover. Celeste even appropriates Emily’s bereavement over the loss of the cat, which is the worst snub of them all.
Mr. Roosevelt is the sort of female-led project we used to describe as “brave,” back when we didn’t have proper language for appraising women’s contributions to popular culture. Mr. Roosevelt isn’t a brave film. Instead, let’s call it a sincere film. Mr. Roosevelt means everything that Wells says, which helps elide that so little of what she says is unheard of. The difference between media like Girls and Mr. Roosevelt is Wells herself. Filtering a standard array of Millennial anxieties through her screenplay and her direction, Wells gets to make proclamations about who she is as an actress, a creative voice and a human being. The joy of the film lies in the act of introduction.
Mostly, Wells structures Mr. Roosevelt via incident. Emily meanders around Austin and gamely tries to warm up to Celeste while remaining platonic with Eric, all of which goes about as smoothly as anyone can reasonably expect. Celeste is a vacuous bore. To paraphrase Emily, she’s a living, breathing Pinterest board, someone who painstakingly curates their life to maximize the number of likes they get on their Instagram posts. It’s not that Celeste is a bad person. She’s just a hollow one. (If we’re being kind she’s just a normal, everyday person caught up in the hollow pursuits of her generation.) Watching Emily navigate first L.A., where she is subjected to a flood of creepy male come-ons in a shockingly small window of time, and then Austin, we get the sense of being outsiders looking in. The worlds Emily observes are worlds she feels that she can’t participate in.