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Somebody Up There Likes Me (2012 film)

Somebody Up There Likes Me
Somebody Up There Likes Me poster.png.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Bob Byington
Produced by Hans Graffunder
Nick Offerman
Written by Bob Byington
Starring Keith Poulson
Nick Offerman
Jess Weixler
Jonathan Togo
Stephanie Hunt
Music by Chris Baio
Cinematography Sean Price Williams
Edited by Frank V. Ross
Distributed by Tribeca Film
Release date
  • March 11, 2012 (2012-03-11) (South by Southwest Film Festival)
Running time
76 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Somebody Up There Likes Me is a 2012 comedy film written and directed by Bob Byington, starring Keith Poulson, Nick Offerman, and Jess Weixler.

The film skips through 35 years in the life of Max Youngman (Poulson), following him through his courtship and marriage to Lyla (Weixler), also the object of affection for his best friend Sal (Offerman). Never seeming to age, Max and the adult characters closest to him stumble in and out of comically misguided relationships and happenstances that are seamlessly woven together by animated vignettes provided by Bob Sabiston (A Scanner Darkly).

Somebody Up There Likes Me premiered at the 2012 South By Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas. Following a theatrical release in Spring of 2013, the film was released to VOD services such as iTunes and Amazon Video. The film is also currently available through Netflix Watch Instantly.

The film received a mostly positive response from critics. It currently holds a 68% positive "Fresh" rating on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.

Writing for Indiewire, critic Eric Kohn praised the film, saying "The tone combines supreme deadpan delivery with a light, airy atmosphere that brings to mind Wes Anderson without the requisite pandering to hip expectations. There's nothing inherently cool or exciting about Max, and yet in his endless quest to find happiness in life--or in death--he's a supremely likable creation who endures multiple eras with the same passive attitude, and so emerges as an everyman for all times (including, during the quasi-science fiction finale, a version of the future that brings to mind Idiocracy)." David Lewis of the San Francisco Chronicle also praised the film, saying in his review, "American cinema has been churning out slacker movies for what seems like eons, so it's refreshing to report that Somebody Up There Likes Me enlivens the genre with a welcome breath of imagination, wit and charm."

Conversely, Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times was slightly more negative, commenting "It’s all kind of cute. Maybe a little too cute, but it does have a nice circle-of-life ending. And along the way, Mr. Byington shows a knack for observational humor, slipping in sly jokes that force you to keep paying attention despite the slim plot. Droll and interesting; just not very substantial."


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