SXSW premiere of Matthew Shear’s BTL Debut

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It is probably no accident that among Matthew Shear‘s acting credits are no less than four movies directed by New York filmmaker extraordinaire Noah Baumbach, or that one of his most recent is another angst-ridden Jewish comedy, Between The Temples. Clearly he has spent his downtime on those sets soaking up the atmosphere and the comedic beats in preparation for his writing/directing debut, Fantasy Life premiering at the SXSW Festival today in the Narrative Feature competition.

Assembling a dream cast of actors who know how to deliver this kind of New York Jewish-centric character-driven comedy that Woody Allen trademarked and others like Baumbach have also travelled in so successfully, Shear actually seems to me to be more of a modern day Richard Benjamin who also turned into a fine filmmaker in his own right. That seems to be the trajectory here except Shear is clearly cribbing from his own life and experience with depression, anxiety, and self-admitted mental illness to craft, however loosely, a character teetering on the edge and a story close to his own world.

Here he plays a young man named Sam, distraught over losing his job as a paralegal, in the midst of a panic attack, and in session with his psychiatrist, Fred (Judd Hirsch) when we meet him. As he leaves the office, Fred’s receptionist and wife (as it turns out) Helen (Andrea Martin) takes pity on him and needing a babysitter for her three granddaughters enlists him for the job. Although he isn’t exactly nanny (or manny) material he gives it a shot. The father David (Alessandro Nivola) is in deep need of help and welcomes him into the apartment of kid mayhem as he leaves for the night. David’s marriage to the sometimes absent Dianne (Amanda Peet) is rocky to say the least and he is about to go on a world tour with his band so Sam finds himself with a bigger gig than imagined. He also finds himself eventually bonding with Dianne, a tv actress whose career like her marriage has also hit the rocks. Her own mental illness and depression oddly matches Sam’s and the new manny finds himself growing closer to her just as he gets invited to join the extended family gathering for the summer on Martha’s Vineyard, including his crush Dianne, her husband, their kids, and two sets of grandparents including Sam’s psychiatrist no less.

Shear has crafted a classic kind of family dynamic for this kind of smart, dialogue-driven comedy but he shows a great deal of promise in carefully keeping the inherent drama beneath the surface, particularly involving mental illness and depression, without using any of it as the butt of a joke. These characters and their deep anxieties and life problems feel very real. Shear also shows promise as a talented director of fellow actors while also carving himself a major role as Allen often did. The casting here is perfection. Peet, out of films in the past few years, is thankfully back in style with a role she makes her own, giving this drifting soul real gravitas and poignancy. Nivola also hits the right notes as a man trying to be a good father in a situation where the mother just isn’t there completely and a career that takes him on the road.

You can’t ask for a better supporting cast than the likes of Hirsch, and the wonderful Bob Balaban as the other grandfather whose extremely negative attitude towards interloper Sam is hilarious. Martin also dives in with relish here, and other well known actors turn up including Holland Taylor in for a brief scene as another psychiatrist.

In the end however this is Shear’s show, both in front of and behind the camera, and if Fantasy Life is any indication he has a bright future with both.

Producers are Charlie Alderman, Chris Dodds, Phil Keefe, Peet, Emily McCann Lesser, David Bernon, and Sam Slate

Title: Fantasy Life

Festival: SXSW (Narrative Competition)

Sales Agent: CAA

Director/Screenplay: Matthew Shear

Cast: Matthew Shear, Amanda Peet, Alessandro Nivola, Judd Hirsch, Bob Balaban, Andrea Martin, Zosia Mamet, Jessica Harper, Holland Taylor, Sheng Wang, Sophie von Haselberg.

Running Time: 1 hour and 31 minutes

Content shared from deadline.com.

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