Somebody I Used To Know review: Alison Brie channels Julia Roberts
Alison Brie's latest collaboration with husband Dave Franco is a surprisingly fresh and melancholy take on the modern romantic comedy

“You’re not gonna pull off some Julia Roberts/My Best Friend’s Wedding shit are you?” With that one line, Somebody I Used To Know both tips its hat to its most obvious inspiration and establishes enough winking distance to keep this latest Dave Franco/Alison Brie collaboration from feeling like a toned-down remake of that classic rom-com. Whereas that 1997 film brimmed with broad slapstick comedy as Roberts’ Jules attempted to foil a wedding (in order to bag the groom for herself), Franco’s 2023 twist aims for a more melancholy register.
Ally (Brie, doing double duty as co-writer and star) is at a crossroads. Her successful reality competition show is suddenly canceled. And while she’d love to go back to her documentary film roots, she’s encouraged instead to take some time for herself which, in true rom-com fashion, requires this career-driven protagonist to head back to her hometown. There, a chance encounter with Sean (Jay Ellis), the ex she left behind, has her wondering if she made the right call leaving for L.A. all those years ago. The two still have great chemistry and can egg one another into chugging cheese sauce and every kind of beer available. It’s as if no time has passed; he’s the comforting blanket Ally needs as she reassesses what she wants to do with her life and whether her priorities are what they should be.
You’d be forgiven for thinking Franco and Brie have concocted a grown-up, maudlin-free riff on any given Hallmark movie. That is, until Ally finds out Sean is set to be married—that weekend—to a young, cool, queer, punk rock chick. And once she’s not-so-nakedly flirting with the groom-to-be, Ally must wrestle with whether she wants to emulate Julia Roberts and become that desperate girl trying to mess up a wedding to reclaim what she once lost. If she does, how far will she go before she realizes what she’s fighting for may not be all that good to begin with?
It is no insult to say that Brie is no Julia Roberts. The Community, Mad Men, and GLOW star has a more grounded on-screen persona. It’s one that she’s honed and perfected over the years and allows her to easily shuttle between network comedies and cable dramas, creating indelible characters that surprise you precisely because they feel so familiar. Her charisma, even in a character like Ally who makes up songs on the spot to her cat and who’s keenly interested in naturism, is laced with a wistful sadness for what could have been.