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Review: Jesse Eisenberg directs a moving mother-son tale

In Jesse Eisenberg鈥檚 smart directorial debut, 鈥 When You Finish Saving the World ,鈥 Julianne Moore plays a Good Person, at least on paper. Evelyn runs a women鈥檚 shelter for the victims of domestic abuse and other kinds of horrors.
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This image released by A24 shows Jay O. Sanders, from left, Julianne Moore, Finn Wolfhard in a scene from " When You Finish Saving The World." (Karen Kuehn/A24 via AP)

In Jesse Eisenberg鈥檚 smart directorial debut, 鈥 ,鈥 Julianne Moore plays a Good Person, at least on paper. Evelyn runs a women鈥檚 shelter for the victims of domestic abuse and other kinds of horrors. She drives a small, eco-friendly car. She listens to the classical music station. She eats Ethiopian food. She lives an unflashy yet undeniably privileged life, in a nice suburban home with her husband and teenage son. She is not, what you might call 鈥渉appy鈥 in the traditional sense.

Her state of being is more like one of smug satisfaction 鈥 or it might be were it not for her high school age kid. Despite all her best efforts to mold him in her image, he has become his own person, and it鈥檚 a person she doesn鈥檛 particularly like.

The kid in question, Ziggy (Finn Wolfhard) decided some time ago that money and fame were what he wanted in life, and he鈥檚 gotten a small taste of both through a decently popular YouTube channel where he livestreams songs for a growing audience of young girls who then throw money at him through likes. He is also smug, in a different way, and resentful of his mother鈥檚 sanctimoniousness. He couldn鈥檛 care less about her Good Work and Good Life Choices.

Ziggy seems to have been shaped in Eisenberg鈥檚 image, or at the least the image we have of him as an awkward, deeply insecure person who masks his insecurity with cruelty and intelligence in films like 鈥淭he Social Network鈥 and 鈥淭he Squid and the Whale.鈥 Wolfhard embodies the cadence and emotionless affect of his director鈥檚 on screen persona perfectly.

The heart of the film is the aching missed connections between mother and son. They have, they know, so much to be grateful for and yet can鈥檛 seem to rise above their superficial differences. It鈥檚 discontented suburban white people, sure, but Eisenberg keeps it fresh, modern and piercing. This point is hammered in, sometimes too bluntly, as both glom onto what they imagine to be ideal companions outside of the home.

Ziggy develops a crush on a serious, politically motivated peer, Lila (Alisha Boe), and tries on a social justice persona to get in her good graces. He has not yet learned to distinguish a woman鈥檚 kindness from romantic interest. And so he asks Evelyn for help on how to sound smart and political. Rather than using it as an opportunity to connect, she decides it鈥檚 a teaching moment to scold him to do the work. They are both right and they are both wrong.

It鈥檚 hard not to watch this and cringe at your own teenage brattiness, but Ziggy is not the only party at fault. He at least has the excuse of his wild teenage brain to blame. Evelyn, on the other hand, does not. The capacity for immaturity is boundless.

Eisenberg鈥檚 script goes hard on this very imperfect mother and Moore fully commits to her awkwardness and cruelty that she hides behind her Goodness. At the center where she works, she finds a stand-in son, a boy about Ziggy鈥檚 age who has come in with his mother to help her get some reprieve from an abusive husband. Kyle (Billy Bryk) is a wildly decent and thoughtful kid -- kind to a fault and eager to please. The fact that Kyle has emerged this good from a household so outwardly 鈥渂ad鈥 breaks something in her brain. She starts to claim Kyle as her own, dreaming about his future, taking him out to dinner, failing to see how uncomfortable she鈥檚 making him.

Like Ziggy鈥檚 obsession with Lila, Evelyn鈥檚 with Kyle is also immensely awkward. Maybe too awkward and maybe a little strained, even with someone as capable as Moore handling the material. The point is received very early on, though, and your patience may start to wane.

Eisenberg, who has already proven himself to be a talented, unsparing writer, shows promise as a director. He has not made a flashy art film, but it's a smart, biting and occasionally sweet character piece about unlikable characters that you still may want to root for, because, though it may be hard to admit, they鈥檙e not so different from us.

鈥淲hen You Finish Saving the World,鈥 an A24 release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for 鈥渓anguage.鈥 Running time: 88 minutes. Three stars out of four.

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MPA Definition of R: Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

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Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr on Twitter: .

Lindsey Bahr, The Associated Press

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