Before We Go Captain America Directs A Movie
It’s typically not a good thing when you’re actively being reminded of other, better movies while you’re watching one. With Before We Go, it begins right with the title. If you haven’t seen Richard Linklater’s Before trilogy – you should do that right now, first off – you may not be instantly reminded of the films, but if you have, it’s almost a certainty. Two strangers meet and spend a quasi-romantic night together while wandering the streets and talking about their respective lives? That’s Before Sunrise. We’ve seen this. Mix in a bit of Lost in Translation – particularly with its frustratingly “ambiguous” ending – and you’ve got Before We Go. One has to wonder how tempting it was to name the film “Before Translation.” The two strangers are Nick (Chris Evans, who also directed the film) and Brooke (Alice Eve). Nick is a musician on his way to a wedding, while Brooke is trying to get home from Manhattan before her husband for reasons that probably count as spoilers. The problem is that she’s missed her train and her purse has been stolen. Nick, intentionally putting off the wedding for other spoiler-y reasons, decides to try to help her out of her current predicament. Will Brooke get home in time? Will Nick get to the party? Will the two strangers fall in love? What do you think? I say all of this, and yet it’s really difficult to dislike Before We Go. It’s still ripping off great movies, and while it lacks the quality they have, it’s amiable and harmless and has all sorts of good intentions. Some of the dialogue is fun to listen to, and a couple of the situations the two characters get themselves into are enjoyable. But I kept thinking back to how much better Before Sunrise was, and I found myself wanting to re-watch that rather than continue watching Before We Go. What’s the point of such a point-for-point retread when the original exists and is significantly better? Before We Go will seem fresh and original only to anyone who hasn’t seen Before Sunrise or Lost in Translation. If you have seen those films, then congratulations, because you don’t have any reason to drop 90 minutes and a few dollars on Before We Go, because it’s a cheap knock-off of those two films. If you haven’t seen them, you’re still better off seeking them out than catching Before We Go, but at least if you see Before We Go first, you may get more enjoyment out of it. Chris Evans may still blossom as a director, but his first outing hasn’t shown that this will be the case. He may want to rethink that “retirement from acting” thing. Bottom Line: A rip-off of better movies, Before We Go copies their parts but can’t replicate their magic. Recommendation: Skip Before We Go and (re-)watch Before Sunrise. [rating=2]