Welcome to Me (2015)

Kristin Wiig (BridesmaidsThe Skeleton Twins) got off to a bit of a late start in her movie career. Still, the hilarious Saturday Night Live alum is making up for lost time and immersing herself in as many unique roles as possible. In my opinion, the funniest female cast member in the history of SNL isn’t allowing herself to be typecast like so many of her predecessors (both male and female) by basically starring in full-length versions of the skits they performed on television. In recent years, many alumni (especially the females like Amy Poehler and Tina Fey) are establishing themselves as legit, in it for the long run actors, writers, directors, and producers. Many of the three names mentioned in this paragraph will rank the talents as 1) Fey, 2) Poehler, and 3) Wiig. I may be in the minority when I say Wiig is my favorite of the three, followed shortly by Fey. For me, while super-talented, Poehler is a distant third.

Welcome to Me is Wiig’s weirdest role and the first one she starred in alone. Sure, she had a pretty incredible ensemble to work with but make no bones about it; this was Wiig’s movie for better or worse. And for the most part, she passed with flying colors. This movie didn’t do so well at the box office (less than half a million dollars), but I’m not sure it was expected to. However, it did score well with the critics (70% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes) and likely will help Wiig land future roles that will allow her to continue to show her acting prowess. Unfortunately, Wiig was quickly the best part of the overly-hyped and incredibly disappointing The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. She’s had bit parts in some good movies like HerDate Night, and Adventureland, but it’s about time she got more recognition and more opportunities as a leading lady. Will that happen? Time will undoubtedly tell. Her performances in these recent movies show that she’s as good as anyone else in Hollywood.

In Welcome to Me, Wiig stars as Alice Klieg, a seemingly good woman doing her best while battling a borderline personality disorder. She’s obsessed with herself, and she’s obsessed with Oprah. She wants to be Oprah. And she gets that chance when she wins $80 million in the lottery. Against the advice of her psychiatrist Daryl (Tim Robbins – Mystic River, The Shawshank Redemption), Alice quits her psychiatric medication and uses her money to buy her own talk show. She is charged by the studio $150,000 per episode, and she signs on for 100 episodes. And as awful as her show is, money is money. Alice’s show (entitled Welcome to Me) is her talking about whatever topics she wants to discuss. She has a small studio audience. She sings her own introduction. She enters on a swan boat. She has no experience being on television and is not interested in being coached. She is there to talk about herself, and the format she wants to follow is similar to Oprah’s. She spends five long minutes savoring a meatloaf cake with sweet potato icing that she just baked in one segment. In the back, one of the show’s producers asks another, “Does Alice want us to watch her eat for an hour?” to which another person replies, “No, but she did say that this will take a legitimate five minutes of the show.” It is awkward moments like this that drive the film.

Welcome to Me is as awkward of a movie as you will likely see in the first half of 2015. This is about a lonely and unbalanced woman who spends her life watching and seeing problems fixed on national television while trying to fix all her issues in front of the world. The subject is herself, and when she is not talking about whatever topics she wants to talk about, she is having actors reenact scenes from her past. This seems to run all of those necessary in her life the wrong way, including her therapist Daryl and her best friend Gina (Linda Cardellini – Scooby-Doo, Brokeback Mountain). She’s a bit of both a sexual exhibitionist and a nymphomaniac. It certainly doesn’t hurt that she is incredibly beautiful and can have sex whenever she wants (which she does) with whoever she wants to do it with (which she does). But, on the other hand, she can be so forthcoming and rude that you are uncertain as an audience member to cringe or laugh. She’s completely unbalanced, and Wiig does a great job of bringing this to life. This is done exceptionally well when a part of Alice’s youth is being reenacted on stage, and she mouths the exact words that are being spoken, and her facial expressions alone show just how distraught some of these episodes in her life have made her.

Many would see Wiig’s Alice as narcissistic. It’s straightforward to do. She is very absorbed in herself. But if you look deeper and can identify with Borderline Personality Disorder, you’ll see that while a lot of this may seem very egocentric, she cannot help. Being off her medication portrays her in an even more negative light. You can like this movie if you want to. However, there will be a lot of regular moviegoers who hate it. I would have been disappointed had I seen this on the big screen, which is ironic because Cake, a movie that saw Jennifer Aniston play a role that was her prototypical role, was one that I was happy that I saw in the theater. Unlike Cakethough, which was much easier to classify as a drama mixed in with a bit of comedy, Welcome to Me was just a different, almost unidentifiable type of film. For whatever reason, I am comparing Welcome to Me with movies like Lars and the Real Girl (which I loved) and Frank (which I’ve been inclined to give a chance to).

Don’t be fooled by the preview. This movie is not mainstream, but that doesn’t mean automatically dismissing it because of its bizarre premise. On the contrary, it’s a well-made film with an outstanding performance by its lead and respectable performances from the supporting cast. It tells an intriguing story, and the end may be too predictable, but that’s okay because the journey there is darker, slightly sicker, and more honest than most movies you will see. It’s worth the price of admission.

Plot 9/10 (unique…which is refreshing in this day and age)
Character Development 9/10
Character Chemistry 8/10
Acting 8/10
Screenplay 8/10
Directing  8/10
Cinematography 8/10
Sound 7/10
Hook and Reel 8/10
Universal Relevance 7/10
80%

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