The Discoverers

Justin Schwarz’s feature writing and directing debut, The Discoverers, explores quotidian film territory: the dysfunctional family on a road trip. Nearly a genre all its own, films like Little Miss Sunshine, The Darjeeling Limited or even We’re the Millers easily come to mind. In these films, misfit and outcast characters learn first-hand that the journey is more important than the final destination. And as in real life, road trips are generally considered successful if all parties arrive unscathed and are still on speaking terms. (Alan Arkin’s Little Miss Sunshine character being the exception to this rule.)
The Discoverers follows this familiar pattern, but a smart script and an endearing father-daughter relationship between veteran actor Griffin Dunne and Madeleine Martin (who plays David Duchovny’s daughter on Showtime’s Californication) save it from becoming too formulaic.
In the film, Dunne plays a has-been history professor—once the youngest history faculty member at the University of Chicago—who now works nights as a security guard to supplement his community college teaching gig. In academia, it’s publish or perish, and Birch’s fall from grace was precipitated by his inability to finish his magnum opus—a now 6,000-page book on York, a slave who accompanied Lewis and Clark on their Corps of Discovery Expedition through the Western United States.
Birch’s downward professional spiral has also affected his personal life, costing him his marriage while straining the relationship with his teenage kids: the smart, wisecracking vegan, Zoe (Martin), and her artistic, introverted brother, Jack (Devon Graye). Under the guise of a family vacation, he and the kids head for a conference in Oregon, where he’ll present in advance of finally getting published by a small college press.
Their road trip is sidetracked almost immediately when Lewis gets a call from his brother (John C. McGinley) to check in on their sickly parents in Idaho. Lewis finds his mother dead on the bathroom floor and his father Stanley (Stuart Margolin) nearly catatonic with grief. The day after the funeral, Stanley disappears, causing Lewis to move his presentation toward the end of the conference to buy time while they look for his father.