through the course of four seasons and one day – the film spans the protagonist's 40th year – we get humour, wistfulness and a degree of personal growth, all presented far more organically than most rom-coms even try to manage
Chelsea Peretti brings her lovably off-kilter comic stylings to a romantic comedy that gradually reveals unexpected backbone; The result is less preoccupied with happy-ever-after than happy-right-now, and it proves a satisfying objective
an amiable, millennial-skewed comedy; this is a nice, wholesome, politely Canadian sort of movie that a girl might watch with her mother in order to suggest that Mom stop nagging about grandchildren
a film that can't quite figure out what to do with her until the very end; She's just dead boring to be around, and even Chelsea Peretti, a gifted natural comedian, can't breathe much life into such a purely unlikable character