Wish I Was Here

Zach Braff’s latest feature film, Wish I Was Here—a follow-up to his 2004 writing and directorial debut Garden State—amassed 46,520 backers on the crowdfunding site Kickstarter. (About 400 of them are listed in the production/press notes.) Braff’s use of nontraditional funding stirred some backlash from critics who thought a celebrity’s use of the online tool would take away from lower-profile projects from unknown artists.
But Braff has always maintained that he chose an alternative route to retain creative control—and the film’s final cut seems to vindicate his decision and the faith of the thousands of backers, too. Even with its imperfections, Wish I Was Here is a funny, moving film that captures the foibles of modern family life while breezily exploring existential themes, from spirituality to aging parents and happiness.
In a quintessential L.A. story, Braff plays Aidan, a struggling actor who’s supported by his wife, Sarah (Kate Hudson), a water department analyst. Their two kids, the precocious tween Grace (Joey King) and the younger, rambunctious Tucker (Pierce Gagnon), are enrolled in an Orthodox Jewish school, courtesy of Aidan’s father, Gabe (Mandy Patinkin). While Aidan’s not particularly religious, he’s made a deal with his father for private school in exchange for the Jewish education.
A cancer diagnosis and subsequent experimental treatment forces Gabe to pull funding for the school, upsetting the family’s delicate status quo. Grace has fully embraced her Orthodoxy and is horrified at the thought of going to public school mid-semester, while Aidan is forced to make some tough choices about his children’s education and his father’s future. He turns to his reclusive brother Noah (Josh Gad) for support, but his brother wants nothing to do with their overbearing, demanding father. Noah would rather spend time designing the ultimate Comic-Con costume to woo his costume designer neighbor, Janine (Ashley Greene).
Aidan decides to home-school his children even though he’s clearly out of his element. During the first day of school, he duct tapes the kids to their chairs, forcing them to watch Levar Burton and Reading Rainbow, which naturally upsets Sarah. The two go out to dinner to talk about and re-evaluate their options; Aidan questions her support of his acting dreams (as his father has none). Sarah, the most patient L.A. wife, ever, gently asks whether he really believes that crunching data is her “dream.” She floors Aidan (and the audience) with Hudson’s perfect delivery of the line: “When did this relationship become solely about supporting your dream?”
The film’s journey follows a man-child as he’s pushed into adulthood. When Aidan’s first introduced, he comes across as an unappealing character. He’s a self-centered actor who’s also not much of a father to his kids. (He swears too much in front of them, smokes joints in the minivan after dropping them off at school, then goes home to pleasure himself while his wife’s at work.) Aidan’s annoyed with people who aren’t supporting his acting career, even though he hasn’t worked in a while. Grown-up topics of religion, spirituality and death are, at first, the furthest from his mind, but there’s a nuanced growth to the character—in both his words and actions—as he prepares for his father’s death. That subtle shift is natural and unforced, unlike some moments in his earlier film.