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April 5, 2024Colin Burgess stars in writer-director Ryan Martin Brown’s first feature, about an office worker who willingly quits his job and still tries to get by in the Big Apple.
Free Time
Keenly observed and winningly performed.
It’s probably an overstatement to call writer-director Ryan Martin Brown’s feature debut, Free Time, a “generation-defining movie.” Shot in 10 days with a cast of relative unknowns, the micro-budget comedy has more or less passed under the radar, premiering at a bunch of midlevel festivals and receiving a limited release in select U.S. cities. (It’s currently playing the Quad in N.Y. and the Landmark Westwood in L.A.)
Over a decade ago, works like Free Time were a dime a dozen. Movies like Andrew Bujalski’s Mutual Appreciation, Aaron Katz’s Quiet City, Lena Dunham’s Tiny Furniture and Alex Ross Perry’s The Color Wheel formed the crux of a New York film scene populated by hipsters and stretching from downtown Manhattan to Park Slope. But then rents exploded during the Bloomberg years and aspiring artists got priced out of town, with many more abandoning the city during a long and devastating pandemic from which New York hasn’t yet fully recovered, either economically or psychologically.
Eternally unsatisfied, Drew works a soul-sucking data entry job that, in the movie’s opening scene, he winds up quitting either out of spite or because he fails to negotiate a promotion with his tough boss (James Webb). When he gets back to his Brooklyn brownstone, Drew proudly tells his roommate (Rajat Suresh) — who sits glued to his laptop all day as a paid clickbait writer — that he finally understands what capitalism is all about and is now prepared to live a life free from meaningless wage slavery.
But Drew has few friends, not to mention any kind of romantic partner, so he doesn’t do much after he quits except lie around all day watching the same movie in bed, before getting high on edibles and going barhopping on his own. At best, he’s hoping to pursue his side-career as a keyboardist in a local band, but when he shows up for rehearsal after a long hiatus, he learns the lead singer has switched genres to country.
The music sequences are among the film’s funniest, filled with awkward tension that bubbles up as Drew begins to realize the band doesn’t want him around anymore. His other encounters hardly go better, whether at a party where he’s clearly unwelcome — a memorable shot has him standing in the kitchen with two other dudes staring at their phones — or back at his former job, where he tries and staggeringly fails to get rehired under a fake name.
Although it’s not exactly a satire, Free Time offers up a sly commentary on a generation — in this specific case, a college-educated white one — that refuses to pursue the hard-knocks financial goals of previous generations but doesn’t really know what else to pursue either, while striving to afford a lifestyle that’s more expensive than ever before.
That Drew tries to save his own skin in the end is no major surprise, and like any New Yorker he’s going to do whatever he can to survive. What’s fascinating about Martin Brown’s keenly observed and amusing debut is the twist it offers on the famous Big Apple adage that, if you can make it there, you can make it anywhere: What does that even mean anymore, if making it means being gainfully employed but still miserable and relatively broke?
Unlike Woody Allen’s ode to his hometown, Manhattan, there are no fireworks at the start of Free Time and there’s no sad, sweeping romance at the end, but rather the acknowledgement that joining the daily grind may be the best the city now has to offer.