From left, Ethan Hawke, Rose Byrne and Chris O’Dowd in “Juliet, Naked.” (Lionsgate-Roadside Attractions)

From left, Ethan Hawke, Rose Byrne and Chris O’Dowd in “Juliet, Naked.” (Lionsgate-Roadside Attractions)

Ethan Hawke brings charm, Rose Byrne brings pathos to ‘Juliet, Naked’

It’s a charming rom-com based on a Nick Hornby novel.

  • By Kenneth Turan Los Angeles Times
  • Friday, August 31, 2018 5:05pm
  • Life

By Kenneth Turan / Los Angeles Times

Its racy title notwithstanding, “Juliet, Naked” is not salacious but delicious. A charming film of an engaging, adult nature about two very different people trying to press reset in their lives, it is comic, heartfelt and smart as they come — a rare combination these days.

Impressively directed with feeling for the material by Jesse Peretz, “Juliet, Naked” is acted with verve, passion and great skill by a cast toplined by Rose Byrne, Ethan Hawke and Chris O’Dowd, all doing impeccable work.

Looming equally large as a creative force is Nick Hornby, author of the original book as well as the novels that inspired “High Fidelity” and “About a Boy.”

“Juliet, Naked” begins by having its two protagonists essentially introduce themselves on-screen.

Up first is Duncan (the brilliantly comic O’Dowd), a Brit who redefines the limits of musical obsession by being the world’s biggest fan of a man he considers “the most underappreciated figure in rock history.”

That would be cult favorite Tucker Crowe, an American singer-songwriter who recorded a dazzling album called “Juliet” and then completely dropped from sight decades ago after an abortive show at a decrepit Minneapolis club called the Pit.

A smug and self-absorbed academic who teaches courses like American Cinema and the Alienated Male at the university in fictitious Sandcliff, a down-at-the-heels British resort town, Duncan admits being “a little overzealous.” But his obliviousness to how bonkers he is is part of the film’s charm.

Duncan’s partner of 15 years is the sane and self-aware Annie (Byrne, letter perfect), heard in voice-over as she walks through town bemoaning her fate.

Annie left a promising career in London to return to Sandcliff to tend to her dying father, but her life of running the same local history museum he did is beginning to seem like a trap.

Though initially dazzled by Duncan’s glibness, Annie has become disenchanted with the way “his obsessions dominate my life.” Though she initially agreed with Duncan’s desire not to have children, she is intensely regretting that decision and having “traded unconditional love for conditional affection.”

Annie has no idea how to change her life until an unexpected package arrives at the house she and Duncan share.

Pretentiously labeled “Juliet, Naked,” it’s nothing less than the acoustic demo versions of the album that Duncan reveres as one of the great works of Western civilization.

Not being in the best of moods, Annie does not take to the new tunes the way her partner does, and in a beautifully set-up series of events, writes a disparaging review of it for Duncan’s fan website.

Duncan, of course, is not happy, but someone else is. Unbeknownst to anyone but herself, Annie’s email has caught the attention of the real Crowe, who writes her back, which is where “Juliet, Naked” kicks into a higher gear.

Perfectly played by Hawke, who has never been more casually charming (which is saying a lot), Crowe turns out to be a feckless ex-rocker with numerous kids from several mothers who has always run the other way when responsibility was called for.

He turns out to be a completely engaging email correspondent, and he and Annie (who has understandably kept all this hidden from Duncan) are soon confiding in each other left and right.

Inevitably, circumstances conspire to bring Tucker to Britain, but how the unavoidable meeting with Annie happens and the way the complex and completely unexpected ramifications of that play out are a treat to behold.

Not only has director Peretz ensured that the characters are both amusing and emotionally resonant, but he’s also used his experience as a founding member of the band Lemonheads to ensure that Tucker’s songs (Hawke sings them all, plus a version of the Kinks’ “Waterloo Sunset”) are convincing as well. As a playful romantic triangle with a shape all its own, “Juliet, Naked” shouldn’t be missed.

“Juliet, Naked” (3½ stars)

In this utterly charming rom-com based on a Nick Hornby novel, a British woman who feels that life is passing her by (Rose Byrne) strikes up an email relationship with a reclusive American rock star (Ethan Hawke) who is worshipped by her self-absorbed college professor husband (a very funny Chris O’Dowd). All three stars are impeccable. The title, by the way, refers to an acoustic version of the Hawke character’s magnum opus.

Rating: R, for language

Showing: Meridian

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