| I Used to Go Here | |
|---|---|
Official poster | |
| Directed by | Kris Rey |
| Written by | Kris Rey |
| Produced by |
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| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Nate Hurtsellers |
| Edited by | Zach Clark |
| Music by | Curtis Heath |
Production companies |
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| Distributed by | Gravitas Ventures |
Release date |
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Running time | 86 minutes[1] |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
I Used to Go Here is a 2020 Americancomedy-drama film written and directed byKris Rey. It starsGillian Jacobs,Josh Wiggins,Hannah Marks,Forrest Goodluck,Jorma Taccone,Kate Micucci,Zoë Chao andJemaine Clement. It stars Jacobs as novelist Kate Conklin who returns to her alma mater 15 years after graduating. It was released tovideo on demand platforms andselect theatres on August 7, 2020, byGravitas Ventures. It premiered on HBO Max in December 2020.[2]
Writer Kate Conklin's engagement is called off at the same time the tour for her debut novel is cancelled due to poor sales. Shortly after, she receives an offer to speak at heralma mater, the fictitious Illinois University inCarbondale,Illinois (site of the real-lifeSouthern Illinois University), from her former professor and mentor David Kirkpatrick.
Returning to Carbondale, Kate is surprised to be staying at abed and breakfast across from the house she lived in while at university. The host is an assertive woman who gives her one set of keys and insists they will not be replaced. She meets the current occupants, three boys named Hugo, Tall Brandon, and Animal, who allow her to visit her former room. She tells them she nicknamed the house The Writers' Retreat. They tell her the name is still used, which she finds flattering. They tell her she's welcome to come to the party they're having there that night.
After her reading, Kirkpatrick offers Kate a teaching position, which she mulls over. Kate loses the keys to the B&B and the host refuses to replace them. Walking home late and finding herself locked out, she sees a number of students at the party across the street, and decides to join them. While there, she receives a text message from her former fiancé, asking her not to contact him anymore. Animal and his girlfriend end up comforting her, and they allow her to stay over at the house.
The next day, while consulting with writing students in a coffee shop, Kate meets with April, one of Kirkpatrick's students and Hugo's girlfriend. April is a rising star in the English department, and when Kate tries to give her some professional advice to make her writing more marketable, she is surprised to have her suggestions rejected. Meanwhile, theNew York Times pans the book in a negative review.
Returning to her former residence, Kate learns that April has dumped Hugo. The others suspect that she was cheating with professor Kirkpatrick. Kate, Hugo, and two others decide to go to Kirkpatrick's house to try to verify the cheating rumors. They walk in on April and Kirkpatrick in bed together.
After serving the students refreshments, Kirkpatrick tells Kate that he and his wife have an open relationship. Kate is disappointed by his actions, though, and further disappointed to learn that he has lied about reading her book. She declines the teaching position he offered her.
Kate and her student friends return to the house. When Kate tells Hugo she's been locked out of her B&B, he offers to let her stay in his room, her former room. He tells her he admires an essay she wrote when she was a student there, and the two have sex.
As Kate sneaks out of the house the following morning, she bumps into April, who is presumably arriving to see Hugo, and who deduces that Kate has just slept with him. Kate apologizes to her for not encouraging her work, and admits that her feelings of failure and jealousy prevented her from being more supportive. She heads back to the house she is staying in where she eats breakfast, witnessing a softer side of the host. Her housemate Laura also calls and tells her she is in labour.
On the drive to the airport, Kate's driver tells her he read and loved her book. When he asks her how the experience of being published has been for her, Kate says "it could be better".
In August 2019, it was announcedGillian Jacobs,Jemaine Clement,Hannah Marks,Forrest Goodluck,Josh Wiggins,Kate Micucci,Jorma Taccone, andZoë Chao had joined the cast of the film, withKris Rey directing from a screenplay she wrote.[3]
It was scheduled to have its world premiere atSouth by Southwest on March 14, 2020,[4] however, the festival was cancelled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[5] Shortly after,Gravitas Ventures acquired distribution rights to the film and set it for an August 7, 2020 release.[6]
Onreview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 84% based on 77 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Elevated significantly by Gillian Jacobs' central performance,I Used to Go Here tells a familiar story with considerable charm."[7] OnMetacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 68 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[8]
The A.V. Club's Katie Rife gave the film a "B", noting Jacobs' performance and smart joke writing as key strengths, with some unevenness in tone that does not match all of Rey's strengths.[9]