
Ingrid is a mentally unstable woman whose mother has passed away and left her a large sum of money. After receiving a simple response to an Instagram post from a renowned celebrity, Ingrid takes her money and heads to California, intent on becoming her new acquaintance’s best friend ever. Aubrey Plaza gives a remarkable, bifurcated performance. In one instance, she's wounded and pitiable, a symbol for the arm's length community built in the kingdom of likes, shares, and emojis. In the next, she's a millennial King of Comedy, travelling the electronic byways with violence in her heart and an insatiable need for acceptance in her soul.
O'Shea Jackson Jr. is the standout as Ingrid's vaping landlord and possible love interest. His chemistry with Plaza initial feels awkward, however, this is intended, both as a result of Ingrid's fractured headspace and the glaring truth that both of these young souls have matured in the digital age, a time where the rituals of courting and seduction have been altered by selfies and click bait phenomenon. This is both Ingrid's most powerful weapon and biggest flaw. The narrative is woven around the concept of how one’s electronic persona is often vastly different from the truth and how the definition of comradery is being rewritten, possibly even diluted as the internet has increased superficial communication and support while the experience of physical human interaction has been slowly paired down to basest of necessities.

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-Kyle Jonathan