As I watched 2025’s Is This Thing On?, I found myself making a special plea to the Academy.
Dear Academy, I wrote in my head,
Please, please, please hurry up and give Bradley Cooper an Oscar so he’ll stop directing these depressing movies. Love, Lisa Marie
Is This Thing On? is technically a dramedy. Will Arnett and Laura Dern star as Alex and Tess Novak, a separated couple who try to learn how to be friends and parents while in the process of splitting up. Both of them find fulfilment in activities that they couldn’t necessarily pursue while being married. Tess once again starts coaching volleyball and dating Peyton Manning. (Technically, Peyton Manning plays a character named Laird but, for all intents and purposes, he’s Peyton Manning.) And Alex becomes a stand-up comedian, performing a routine about his failing marriage.
Casting Will Arnett as a comedian with a dark side isn’t that much of a stretch and Arnett does do a good job in the role, even if he sometimes seems to be doing a bit of a Bradley Cooper imitation himself. (Of course, Cooper himself also appears in the movie, playing Arnett’s best friend.) Arnett is not only plays the lead role but he also co-wrote the script. Both Arnett and Cooper have been open about their past struggles with alcoholism and Is This Thing On?, with its muted color scheme and its nervous camera work, is very much a 12-step film. It’s a movie where people talk and talk and talk about their problems and their past mistakes and their regrets. The scenes of Alex performing stand-up have an AA feeling to them. One could just as easily imagine Alex taking the stage and saying, “Hi, I’m Alex and I’m an alcoholic.” The support that he gets from the audience feels very much like the applause that one would get upon announcing they had gone a week, a month, or a year without taking a drink.
And that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Many stand-up comedians have attested to the fact that their sets often double as therapy. I used to be pretty cynical about programs like AA but then I saw how it helped my Dad not only get sober but also stay sober. Cooper and Arnett are smart enough to not focus too much time on Arnett’s stand-up. We see enough to convince us that people would find him to be funny but the movie seems to understand that humor is subjective and, unlike other stand-up films like The Comedian, it doesn’t beg us to laugh at Alex’s act. I appreciated the fact that the laughter in the club scenes sounded like actual laughter, as opposed to sounding like a bunch of extra being ordered to make a joyful noise no matter what.
Is This Thing On? is well-acted and, though he leans a bit too much on the jittery hand-held camera thing, Cooper’s direction gets better as it goes but ultimately, Alex and Tess never really come across as if their worth all the trouble. They come across as being the self-absorbed friends that everyone secretly hopes won’t be able to make it to the party. Unlike Cooper’s A Star Is Born, the film never quite convinces us that we’re watching real relationship. It’s easy to believe that Tess could get back into coaching volleyball after she splits up with Alex but when Tess announces that she’s been offered a spot coaching the Olympic team, it’s hard not to roll your eyes just a little. Being offered a chance to coach the high school team or maybe the community center team would have worked just as well. Instead, it has to be the Olympics. It’s one of those things, like quitting your job and using your homemade cupcakes to open a bakery, that only happens in Hollywood films.









