Admittedly, it’s hard to watch the first twenty minutes of Dinner in America. The slurs are gratuitous, the suburban families are superficially satiric, and it seemed at first glance the leads were, too. But when the punk singer and his awkward fan meet, and they start driving around the Midwest, sneaking into places they probably shouldn’t be, and enacting the revenge plans to get back at Patty’s tormentors, there’s a charming chemistry formed between these two weirdos, portrayed with a dynamic back-and-forth between Kyle Gallner and Emily Skeggs. The random destructive quirks Simon uses end up being the perfect response for Patty’s life and the deranged fan letters turn out to be the kind of lyrical genius Simon’s been looking for. Dinner in America is brash and rough at the edges like its leads, but it makes for a scrappy, edgy romcom that might actually be punk.
Genre: Comedy, Music, Romance
Actor: Emily Skeggs, Griffin Gluck, Hannah Marks, Kyle Gallner, Lea Thompson, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Nick Chinlund, Nico Greetham, Pat Healy, Ryan Malgarini, Sophie Bolen
Director: Adam Rehmeier