 
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Adam Rehmeier
  Starring: Kyle Gallner, Emily Skeggs, Pat Healy, Griffin Gluck, Lea Thompson, Mary Lynn Rajskub
 
    
      Best known for his controversial "torture porn" 2011 directorial debut
      The Bunny Game, Adam Rehmeier reinvents himself with a charming coming-of-age
      comedy in Dinner in America. While his latest movie might be adorable, it's also confrontational,
      thanks to a protagonist who embodies exactly the sort of edgelord who
      might make a movie as shocking as The Bunny Game.
    
    
      Also reinventing himself is Kyle Gallner, an actor I recall always
      being cast as Goth teens in horror movies a decade ago but whom I haven't
      seen onscreen in quite a while. He plays Simon, an angry young man who
      wanders the suburbs of Detroit getting into scrapes and avoiding the
      police. When we meet him first he's just been kicked out of a medical
      research study. Invited for dinner at the home of a fellow patient (Hannah Marks), he ends up seducing her mother (Lea Thompson) before setting
      the family's garden on fire and fleeing.
    
     
      
      When the nerdy Patty (Emily Skeggs) lies to the police about having
      seen Simon in the alley behind her place of employment, Simon takes
      advantage of her charity. Spinning a yarn to her parents (Mary Lynn Rajskub
      and Pat Healy) about having returned from missionary work in
      Tanzania, Simon temporarily moves into Patty's home, immediately
      introduces her kid brother (Griffin Gluck) to the joys of pot and
      sets about seducing Patty.
    
    
      Like last year's
      Babyteeth, Dinner in America has its roots in Jean Renoir's 1932
      comedy Boudu Saved from Drowning. It's another tale of a white bread suburban family finding themselves
      playing host to a young man who lives a precarious existence on the
      fringes of society. There's also a lot of Vincent Gallo's
      Buffalo '66 here, with both Gallner's Simon and Skeggs'
      Patty broken from the same moulds as the angry anti-hero played by Gallo
      and the awkward young woman he falls for in that cult classic.
    
     
      
      There's not a lot of innovation on display here, with Simon getting up to
      exactly the sort of hijinks you might expect of such a character - we
      know, for instance, that the two young jocks who constantly harass Patty
      are going to get their comeuppance at Simon's hands at some point, and
      that Patty is going to come out of her shell in Simon's company. But what
      makes Dinner in America so striking is how it doubles down
      on Simon's worst elements while still making it completely believable that
      a sheltered young woman like Patty would find him irresistible.
    
    
      Simon is a tornado tearing his way through the suburbs, a sociopath with
      no filter who speaks his mind and doesn't care who he offends. In this era
      where everybody seems to be constantly walking on eggshells, he's
      something of the perfect anti-hero. Sure, he's a narcissistic asshole, but
      it's hard not to envy the freedom he enjoys through his complete lack of
      self-awareness. In what feels like his first role of substance, Gallner is
      thoroughly captivating. With his tank top and shaved sides he's a parody
      of fuckboy nonchalance, and there's a genuine air of scuzzy danger that
      few of today's young American actors seem capable of conveying.
    
     
      
      Rehmeier directs with the same punk energy harnessed by his leading man.
      His film moves at breakneck pace as the speed freak Simon takes Patty on a
      whirlwind tour of nihilistic possibilities, but it always finds time to
      focus on its characters. His script is a lot less literary than you might
      expect from an American indie dramedy of its type – we learn as much about
      Simon and Patty through their actions as their words. I suspect some
      viewers may miss the point here and find
      Dinner in America as abrasive as its male protagonist, but
      anyone willing to embrace its skanky charms is in for a treat.
    
     
    
      Dinner in America is streaming on
      Arrow and available to buy or rent on all digital platforms in the UK
      from 1st June.
    
     
