Film Review: Ingrid Goes West (2017)

At its core, Matt Spicerโsย Ingrid Goes West is about identity, or maybe more accurately, the lack thereof. Most of his and co-writer David Branson Smithโs characters are phonies. ย They live fake, vapid, self-centered livesโlives that Holden Caulfield would have a field day with. They are quintessential California sell-outs, but the difference between them and Holdenโs brother, D.B., is that these folks are essentially talentless, and moochers to boot. Personally, I find this privileged, carefree, โbohemianโ lifestyle somewhat nauseating, and from the way Spicer treats his subjects, so does he.

Ingrid (an always great Aubrey Plaza) is fresh off a stint at a mental facility after suffering an Instagram fueled breakdown (she confuses โlikesโ with actual, real-life shared moments, which gets her in a bit of trouble). After her hospital stay, sheโs soon back on her phone, and finds a new potential best friend in one Taylor Sloane (Elizabeth Olsen), an Instagram โinfluencerโ (itโs a real thing, I had to look it up) who lives in California. With cash from her recently deceased motherโs insurance policy, she’s off to the west coast to start her new life, with her new BFF that sheโs never met.
In short, Ingrid is a stalker, and possibly a delusional one at that.

Somehow, though, sheโs likable enough, and soon she creates a situation in which Taylor and her husband, Ezra (Wyatt Russell), are ingratiated to her, thus allowing her into their circle. ย To us, the viewer, Taylor and Ezraโsย #perfectย lives are shallow and materialistic, full of faux-intellectualism and hashtags, but to Ingrid, each other, and their social media followers, the world may as well revolve around them.
The only grounded character in the film is Dan (OโShea Jackson Jr.), Ingridโs landlord. His dreams may be lofty and far-fetched, but at least theyโre of his own design. Add to the mixย the arrival of Taylorโs bully of a brother, Nicky (a perfectly detestable Billy Magnussen), and you have the beginnings of Ingridโs inevitable undoing.

This undoing is also where the film strays some. Up to this point, what we have is a fun, albeit darkly skewed, comedy about the nature of identity and human interaction. Itโs wacky, but itโs largely believableโat least in the world thatโs been created. The eventual unraveling of Ingridโs plan, for a moment, goes a bit too far to the absurd. Danโs character development doesnโt quite match up with what Ingrid gets him to do. This is forgivable, however, simply because itโs short-lived, and, more importantly, it doesnโt end in the way these types of films usually end. Ingrid still spirals into deeper and deeper darkness, but not quite as deep and as dark as you might predict. Nicky directly referencesย Single White Femaleย (1992), and if youโve ever seen that film, you would too, but as much professional help as she likely needs, Ingrid never devolvesย thatย far.

On a formal level, I was surprised at the level of careย Ingridย was given. Going in, I wouldnโt have been surprised to find myself watching some sort of shaky-cam, hip, indie, mumblecore, black comedy, but, thatโs not whatย Ingridย is. The black comedy is there, sure, but the camera work and dialogue are surprisingly reserved for a film about this specific age group.

What strikes me most, though, is the ending. This isnโt necessarily a spoiler (youโve been warned, just in case), but, that nobody seems to have learned anything at all from the mistakes theyโve made is particularly fascinating to me. 2011โsย Young Adultย had a similar ending, in which the main characterโs bad behavior is completely validated by an admirer. In Ingridโs case, new identities are formed and the delusion continues, likely over and over again.
Maybe Iโm old fashioned, but Iโve examined my online persona vs. my real-life one, and I think they match up pretty accurately. How does yours? I think thatโs what Spicer is getting at here:ย real identities vs. projected ones.
