welcome_to_me

She may have recently been cast in Ghostbusters, but Kristin Wiig keeps her indie sensibilities very much intact. Before she stopped by this year’s Sundance with a pair of new features, she returned to Toronto International Film Festival where she debuted the Will Ferrell-produced dramedy Welcome to Me. Directed by Shira Piven, the first trailer has now arrived for the film which finds Wiig’s character winning the lottery and launching her own talk show.

We were mixed on the film, but praised the central peformance, saying in our review, “It’s Wiig who owns every frame and runs the gamut of emotion to lay herself bare physically and psychologically. Her childlike sensibility at the start creates expectations it’s simply another funny role, but when she expands into the meaty stuff you will be stunned. And honestly, the film’s worth a look for that alone.”

With a hat tip to Film Divider, check it out below for the film also starring James Marsden, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Wes Bentley, Tim Robbins, Joan Cusack, and Linda Cardellini.

kristen-wiig-welcome-to-me

In Welcome to Me, director Shira Piven explores what happens when a commonly held fantasy comes true for a complicated person, and a story of good luck evolves into a compelling and darkly humorous drama.

Alice Klieg (Kristen Wiig) suffers from borderline personality disorder, and though she manages it — and the accompanying medications and therapeutic care — fairly well, past tumult has left a broken marriage and strained familial relationships in its wake. She finds grounding in her daily routine, which includes memorizing every episode of Oprah and carefully monitoring her wardrobe and protein-laden diet. One can’t help but get the sense that Alice is straining to embrace bigger things, and when her numbers come up in the state lottery, suddenly she gets focused… on eighty million dollars’ worth of possibilities.

In quick succession, Alice buys a stretch of hours at a local television company, eschews her medication and therapy, moves into a casino, and creates her own talk show about — what else? — herself. As her show gains an audience (despite some off-the-wall cooking and medical demonstrations), Alice realizes that viewers identify with her re-enactments of past hurts and social slights. What she doesn’t recognize is that her own hunger for fame may just reflect a deeper need to be heard.

On its surface, Welcome to Me is a parable about how wish fulfillment doesn’t always lead to happiness, but screenwriter Eliot Laurence has also layered in perceptive observations about the hollowness of fame and our current culture of confession. Despite Alice’s outer volatility, Wiig centres her with a delicate inner stillness, keeping the viewer engaged with her every move. Buying a lottery ticket will never seem simple again.

Alchemy will release the film later this year.

No more articles