There’s film about remedy and PTSD inside Jay Duplass’ “See You After I See You.” The difficulty is, it’s buried in a so-so household ensemble movie about shared grief and restoration.
The movie attracts inspiration from the real-life tragedy endured by screenwriter Adam Cayton-Holland, who tailored the screenplay from his memoir, Tragedy Plus Time. (For many who would possibly wrestle with math in a conceptual realm, the sum of these two elements is comedy.) Fortunately, “See After I See You” has loads of laughs to offset the complicated material of charting a suicide’s aftermath.

