All Happy Families review – a sweet reckoning… | Little White Lies

All Hap­py Fam­i­lies review – a sweet reck­on­ing with fam­i­ly strife

14 Mar 2025 / Released: 14 Mar 2025

Words by David Jenkins

Directed by Haroula Rose

Starring Chandra Russell, Josh Radnor, and Rob Huebel

Four people sitting outdoors, two men in casual clothing and hats, one woman wearing a hat, and another man wearing sunglasses.
Four people sitting outdoors, two men in casual clothing and hats, one woman wearing a hat, and another man wearing sunglasses.
3

Anticipation.

This Josh Radnor-starring American indie did the rounds on the US festival circuit.

3

Enjoyment.

Null points for innovation, but sometimes that’s just A-OK.

3

In Retrospect.

A pleasant, well-mounted family comedy and nothing more than that.

This well-mount­ed ensem­ble com­e­dy sees a schlub­by Josh Rad­nor forced to deal with a vis­it from his eccen­tric par­ents and brother.

Tried and test­ed for­mu­la is the order of the day in Haroula Rose’s breezy fam­i­ly reunion com­e­dy All Hap­py Fam­i­lies, a film which proves that there’s still fun to be had from cleav­ing to tem­plates and stay­ing well with­in the white lines of cosy con­ven­tion. Josh Rad­nor plays beardy black sheep Gra­ham, a down-at-heel mis­an­thrope who is set to rent out his over­sized garage space to charis­mat­ic local chef Dana (Chan­dra Rus­sell) once he’s dealt with a vis­it from his folks (Becky Ann Bak­er and the late John Ash­ton) and his idiot broth­er Will (Rob Huebel) who is the star of a pop­u­lar TV soap opera and wants every­one in the Chica­go area to know it.

There’s no real plot arc to the film, it mere­ly details how everyone’s anx­i­eties man­i­fest and stealth­ily cause harm to friends, lovers and some­times even the ran­dom wait­ress at a local dive bar. Albeit in an enter­tain­ing­ly com­ic fash­ion. The throb­bing inter­per­son­al strains inten­si­fy with a gen­tle log­ic, even if, tonal­ly, the film does some­times stray into a mid-tier stream­ing dra­mady ser­i­al at times. Yet Rad­nor is a lov­able lug who forges a sweet bond with his ten­ant-to-be, and every­one else ulti­mate­ly wants to have their secrets and vices with­out caus­ing upset to oth­ers. Which, as the iron­i­cal­ly-primed title sug­gests, is actu­al­ly some­thing that doesn’t tend to occur in real life.

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