A Good Person review: Florence Pugh is stranded by an implausible story
Writer-director Zach Braff comes up well short with this odd blend of broad humor and deep tragedy

A Good Person doesn’t waste time. Its leading character Allison (Florence Pugh) is immediately presented as having a happy life that’s full of love and promise. Quickly, she’s involved in an accident that she survives but others don’t. Before long she’s hit rock bottom: she is unemployed and lives with her mother (Molly Shannon), she breaks up with her loving fiancé (Chinaza Uche), and she succumbs to opioid addiction. There’s an economy to the early goings that feels brisk but hints at storytelling problems, coming on like footnotes to the narrative instead of fully dramatized scenes.
Writer-director Zach Braff speeds through the setup to get to the meat of his film: the relationship between Allison and Daniel (Morgan Freeman). He’s a retired cop who’s been sober for years and has been affected by the same tragic accident that Allison survived. They run into each other by chance in an AA meeting and soon they are helping each other navigate their grief. Allison is trying to kick her opioid addiction while Daniel is raising his teenage granddaughter (Celeste O’Connor) on his own. Shenanigans ensue. Yes, you read that correctly. In presenting Allison and Daniel’s complicated lives, Braff resorts to implausible storylines and scenes full of histrionics. To break the high drama of this story of survival, he injects broad humor that unfortunately feels jarring and not organic. Comedy can come out of tragedy but not in this clashing manner.
A Good Person is all over the place; a mismatch of tones. One part of it is a serious drama about overcoming grief and forging a path forward in the aftermath of a tragedy. The other part is a comedy of manners about the hijinks that can arise when people of different generations try to live together. Neither part works. The drama is a cluster of scenes with bad dialogue and platitudes instead of actual pathos. The comedy comes in when it’s uncalled for, breaking whatever genuine emotion the actors worked hard to craft. Sometimes all of this happens within the same scene, causing whiplash.