The Good Life (2007)
4/10
Bald misfit spins his wheels in downbeat Indie
8 December 2010
Jason Prayer lives his life as a round peg in the square hole of college football-obsessed Nebraska. Writer/director Stephen Berra has provided his hero with plenty of baggage so an audience can easily tag him as a stereotypical Indie protagonist. He suffers from alopecia, an auto-immune disorder which has left him completely hairless. His father has committed suicide, he lives with his mom in a shabby house besieged by debt collectors from the electricity company - and he works the day shift at a gas station where he's terrorized by a muscle car maniac.

Jason's evenings are spent assisting the senile owner of a decaying cinema, where vintage movies are projected over empty auditoriums. His prospects perk up when beautiful Indie-babe Frances shows up at the theater, and recognizes him as a kindred spirit - and later that night she drives him home after he gets beaten up by the motor-head psycho. Unfortunately the course of true love seldom runs smoothly in Indie-world, and by the end of the film it's uncertain whether Frances is escaped-from-an-asylum crazy, or a figment of Jason's imagination created by too many nights at the movies. Either way, she's the catalyst that prompts him to embark on a quest for a better life beyond freezing Nebraska - and that can't be all bad.
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