Sundance: Appropriate Behavior


Sometimes a film need not totally work in order to win you over. Case in point: Appropriate Behavior, which heralds the arrival of a fresh talent in the form of multi-hyphenate Desiree Akhavan. Reminiscent of Zoe Lister-Jones and Daryl Wein’s Lola Versus, starring Greta Gerwig, Appropriate Behavior will draw some barbs as just another single-girl-in-the-city comedy, but it puts a wry spin on gender politics and Persian-American assimilation. Akhavan stars as Shirin, a closeted bisexual Iranian-American who, fresh off a breakup with Maxine (Rebecca Henderson), stumbles through some dubious personal decisions and gets roped into teaching a Park Slope film class for unruly 5-year-olds.

As a cogent whole, Appropriate Behavior can’t quite decide what story it wants to tell; it’s caught between being a story of romantic dissolution, sexual coming out and a more mordant satire. Still, it crackles scene to scene, with warped meet-cutes (“I find your anger incredibly sexy — I hate so many things too”) and other off-kilter delights. Akhavan has an observant sense of humor and a great touch with dialogue. Part Sarah Silverman, part Molly Shannon, she’s equally at home with garrulousness and deadpan awkwardness. For the original capsule review, from Paste, click here; to get all up in the film’s website, click here(Parkville Pictures, unrated, 82 minutes)