James Morosini’s “I Love My Dad” grabs the eternal adage of “write what you know” and sprints towards the edge of a cliff.

The story is true: Morosini’s father pretended to be someone else online in order to check in and be close with

Morosini’s father pretended to be someone else online in order to check in and be close with

the son who had blocked him on social media. It’s such a bizarre concept, such a painfully sad move to be close to someone,

that you have to laugh. “I Love My Dad” lets the viewer do that over and over,

creating a roller coaster ride of one desperate and awful idea after another,

one that’s bound to crash and burn albeit with confident style.

There proves to be a lot of character-based comedy to go around with this concept, so much that

“I Love My Dad” can get close to underusing certain pieces of its great ensemble. Amy Landecker is funny but too briefly seen as Franklin’s mother Diane

If You Want More Web Stories Visit Our Website mechanical.karmasthan.com And Get Latest Update 

Share

mechanical.karmasthan.com