Led by twinkle-eyed “Ugly Betty” star Michael Urie, “Single All the Way” follows a perpetually single man, Peter, who brings his best friend Nick (Philemon Chambers) home for the holidays. The plan is to tell Peter’s family that the longtime friends and roommates finally professed their love for each other, which of course would be a huge lie and completely unlikely (you can see where this is going). When they arrive to snowy New Hampshire from their busy L.A. lives, the jig is up before it begins because Peter’s mother (Kathy Najimy) has nabbed Peter a blind date with her hunky spin instructor James (“Brothers and Sisters” star Luke Macfarlane).
Philippe Bosse/Netflix As Peter and James begin a promising courtship, Nick happily makes inroads with the family, designing an elaborate Christmas light display and spending more quality time with the nieces and nephews than Peter. Turns out, Christmas Carol (Mom’s preferred name for all of December) isn’t the only yenta in this gentile family, and soon the whole family is conspiring to get Peter and Nick to see that they are fated to be together. The nieces and sisters (way too many to count or distinguish from each other) decide to rope the boys into helping eccentric Aunt Sandy (Jennifer Coolidge) with the Christmas pageant, which is quickly floundering under the crushing weight of Aunt Sandy’s unrealized ambitions. Though the dialogue is surprisingly low on actual jokes, Coolidge delivers one of her most unhinged comedic performances. She seems to have completely shed any inhibitions, if she ever had any, deciding to squeeze every drop of fun out of the low-stakes material. Interpreting the assignment in a zany dimension all her own, she digs delightfully into a guttural baritone — a far cry from her typical middle-aged ditz breathiness. The funniest scene in the movie involves her playing every part in the pageant like some sort of deranged one-woman show.
The closest comparison for “Single All the Way” is Hulu’s “Happiest Season,” which hit home TVs last holiday season to terrible reviews despite hailing from queer actor-turned-director Clea Duvall. In spite of the critics, or perhaps to spite them, “Happiest Season” earned plenty of views, though many would have tuned in to see Kristen Stewart play gay in anything. Netflix shrewdly noticed Hulu racking up the watches and sparking online conversation, even though the collective response to the movie was a universal eye-roll (from anyone other than teenage girls, at least). With such a low bar to surpass, Netflix bet smartly on “Single All The Way,” and it didn’t even have to pay movie star salaries. Netflix gets its views, LGBTQ audiences get mindless holiday fare, and the world gets more Jennifer Coolidge. Ah, progress.
Grade: C+
“Single All The Way” premiered December 2 on Netflix. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.