MVD Visual: Wrong Reasons (2022) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of MVD Visual

Film worker and Kevin Smith documentarian Josh Roush along with his wife, coproducer and actress Liv Roush who recently served as a production manager on Andrew Dominik’s Blonde and the upcoming Maestro, have put their heads together to make ostensibly Josh Roush’s first feature as a writer-director: the Black Snake Moan inspired satirical darkly comic thriller Wrong Reasons.  Billed as ‘a punk rock movie’ with lots of needle drops including Tim Armstrong, L7, Black Flag and many more, its another movie about a mysterious man who kidnaps and chains a troubled girl to the bed in an effort to help her go clean.  The results don’t always land with some sequences touching on the awful depths scoured by the also-Kevin Smith produced Vulgar, and yet the end result is more or less well meaning. 

 
Heroin addicted punk rock singer Kat Oden (Liv Roush) wallows on her apartment couch strung out next to her rapey boyfriend Nick Boon (John Enick) when a masked man who later reveals himself to be James Winandi (James Parks from The Hateful Eight) kidnaps and imprisons her in his shabby home, chaining her ankle to the bed.  Stirring a media frenzy including lascivious news reporters played by Caitlin Reilly and Kevin Smith, drawing out the kidnapper’s estranged brother Marshall (David Koechner) while a beleaguered detective Charles Dobson (Ralph Garman) tries to track down the kidnapper’s home.  All the while, the initially angry and frightened Kat Oden starts growing fond of her captor and after escaping she even comes back under his wing, further complicating the already bizarre situation.
 
Shot by Roush himself with Matthew Rowbottom on digital in 2.35:1 panoramic widescreen, Wrong Reasons looks rather amateurish and at times the lighting and color grading changes mid-shot, perhaps unintentionally with the focus drifting in and out.  As with most digital productions, there’s the question of the film’s frame rate and one wonders whether or not, like with other Kevin Smith films before it, the filmmakers knew what they were doing.  Still, the cameos including but not limited to Vernon Wells, Keith Coogan and Daniel Roebuck keep us distracted long enough that we don’t mind the amateurish shortcomings so much.  Liv Roush is mostly fine in the lead role though James Parks upstages her as the mysterious kidnapper whose strange intentions might actually be doing the drug addicted singer some measure of good.

 
Still, despite Kevin Smith’s impassioned introduction before the movie and the homegrown do-it-yourself nature of the piece, Wrong Reasons is something we’ve seen many times before in other stronger minded movies.  While there’s room for Josh Roush’s filmmaking career to grow, Liv Roush despite her punkish appearance and comfortability with frolicking about half naked in fishnet stockings really out to return to production management.  Kevin Smith is a well meaning nice guy whose money sometimes goes into projects that would otherwise get no outside attention were his name not attached.  There were aspects of this very overtly small kidnapping dark comedy that went over well while other moments landed with a thud, but overall my friendly recommendation is to skip this one.  Godspeed to Josh and Liv Roush for branching out into other arenas of the filmmaking world but as a viewer I wasn’t a fan.

--Andrew Kotwicki