I watched it. I generally enjoyed the movie. I found the dialogue, especially, to be very realistically awkward in necessary scenes. You should have mentioned Julia Stiles was in it! What I did have trouble with was the idea that Julia Stiles would find an unshaven David Cross "cute," but that's okay. The ending felt rather as if the writer didn't know how else to end the play/movie/script. I also think this movie tries to say more about relationships, or wants to say more about relationships, than it ends up saying. I think it does a very good job at showing human beings as what they are, which is mostly silly beings who care very deeply about things that seem inconsequential to everyone else. I thought it was very realistic in that sort of way. I found Hedy and the conspiracy-theorist-dude's relationship least convincing. Dude seemed to me to be more of a "younger brother" maybe "annoying younger brother" figure than "equal friend/party to the action." I had this sneaking feeling the whole movie long that the event was going to turn out to be false even though the movie never encourages this idea at all. I think it's just a trap of suspicion that you run into when you have elaborate or crazy situations happen in seemingly everyday settings.