I Used to Go Here backdrop - movieMx Review
I Used to Go Here movie poster - I Used to Go Here review and rating on movieMx
202087 minComedy, Drama, Romance

I Used to Go Here

Is I Used to Go Here a Hit or Flop?

FLOP

Is I Used to Go Here worth watching? With a rating of 5.6/10, this Comedy, Drama, Romance film is a mixed-bag for fans of the genre. Read on for our detailed analysis and user reviews.

5.675 votes
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I Used to Go Here Synopsis

Following the lackluster launch of her debut novel, 35-year-old writer Kate Conklin receives an invitation from her former professor and old crush to speak at her alma mater. With her book tour canceled and her ego deflated, Kate decides to take the trip, wondering if it might give her the morale boost she sorely needs. Instead, she falls into a comical regression—from misadventures with eccentric twenty-year-olds, to feelings of jealousy toward her former professor’s new favorite student. Striking the balance between bittersweet and hilarious, Kate takes a journey through her past to reevaluate her future.

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Top Cast

Gillian Jacobs
Gillian JacobsKate Conklin
Josh Wiggins
Josh WigginsHugo
Jemaine Clement
Jemaine ClementDavid Kirkpatrick
Hannah Marks
Hannah MarksApril
Forrest Goodluck
Forrest GoodluckAnimal
Jorma Taccone
Jorma TacconeBradley Cooper
Zoë Chao
Zoë ChaoLaura
Kate Micucci
Kate MicucciRachel
Brandon Daley
Brandon DaleyTall Brandon
Khloe Janel
Khloe JanelEmma

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is I Used to Go Here worth watching?

I Used to Go Here has received mixed reviews with a 5.6/10 rating. It might be worth watching if you're a fan of Comedy, Drama, Romance movies.

Is I Used to Go Here hit or flop?

I Used to Go Here has received average ratings (5.6/10), performing moderately with audiences.

What genre is I Used to Go Here?

I Used to Go Here is a Comedy, Drama, Romance movie that Following the lackluster launch of her debut novel, 35-year-old writer Kate Conklin receives an invitation from her former professor and old crush to ...

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Critic Reviews

tmdb28039023Aug 29, 2022
★ 1

I Used to Go Here is an alleged comedy about a hack who admits that “I'm not good enough to write a good book so I wrote a sh*tty book.” Not only has this premise been lifted from a Family Guy episode, but the movie's sense of humor is half-assed at best (but what can you expect from producers Andy Samberg, Jorma Tacone, and Akiva Schaffer?). For example, there is a character named Bradley Cooper. That's it. That's the joke. What scriptwriter/director Kris Rey fails to see is that it's not enough to name a character after celebrity; you have to actually do something, go somewhere with it (I'm reminded of the 'Michael Bolton' character in Office Space). What's the point of naming the character Bradley Cooper if no one is ever even going to acknowledge it? You keep waiting for the other shoe to drop, and when it never does, it becomes nothing more than an annoying distraction. Following the release of her new book, novelist Kate Conklin (Gillian Jacobs) receives an invitation from her former college professor, David Kirkpatrick (Jemaine Clement), to speak at her alma mater, the fictional Illinois University. Her novel is called Seasons Passed, and from its cover and what little we hear of it, it wouldn't be out of place in the Nicholas Sparks canon; that is to say, it's the kind of book that gets its author invited to Oprah, not to a higher learning institution. Kate accepts the invitation, and “rediscovers her college, but now through the eyes of the students living there” (All Movie), in whose lives she “finds herself deeply enmeshed” (IMDb). Actually, what Kate "rediscovers" doesn't go much farther than the house where she herself lived as a student, and where she spends most of her stay; meanwhile, the current tenants drop everything (even intercourse, because what kind of college students would have sex when they could get involved in the depressing problems of a 35-year-old instead? The same kind of college students who are never seen attending any classes) to be at her beck and call. In a nutshell, Kate hijacks this group of supposed college students, spends a night with one of them, and then leaves without learning from or teaching them anything; she even turns down a teaching position at the university, though it's not clear what exactly would qualify her for that position in the first place.