Whatever else it achieves in offering observations about friendship and love in

Whatever else it achieves in offering observations about friendship and love in the modern age, Life Partners is definitive on one subject: the tyranny of the smartphone. The devices intrude on almost every scene—not as a way of making a point about our wired existence, but just as a part of everyday life. (One subplot involves texting while driving, and the minor fender-bender that results.) The characters are accustomed to having every conversation, flirtation, or seduction punctuated by the buzzing WHAAH of a phone vibrating its latest demand. No wonder they can’t concentrate long enough to straighten out their lives.

At the heart of the film is the longtime friendship between Sasha (Leighton Meester) and Paige (Gillian Jacobs), 29-year-olds who like to drink wine, stage mock public arguments, and provide live running commentary for reality-TV shows. Sasha is lesbian and Paige is straight, but this doesn’t have too much to do with the story’s main turn: Paige meets a boyish Mr. Right (Adam Brody), and the old friends must delicately renegotiate their time together. Director Susanna Fogel works hard to make them specific people, not types: Paige is control-oriented and condescending, while Sasha keeps dating young airheads. There’s also a nice wrinkle in what seems to be a cliche about Sasha, who works at a meaningless job but has a true calling as a singer/songwriter : namely, what if—in opposition to most chase-your-dream movie scenarios—the true calling isn’t actually all that compelling anymore?

These are valid storytelling beats, and Life Partners draws energetic turns from its engaging leads, all of whom came from television (Meester became a star on Gossip Girl, Jacobs was a regular on Community). As veterans of same-sex dating battles, Gabourey Sidibe and Beth Dover provide some laughs. But for all the nice effort, I didn’t really believe Life Partners. From scene to scene, everybody tries too hard to convince us how informal and funny it all is. Meester and Jacobs unleash brassy zingers like nobody’s business, but they don’t convey the laid-back, lived-in rapport of old friends who know what the other person is going to say before she says it. Of course, when the world is keyed to the rhythm of the smartphone, no wonder everybody seems jumpy.

film@seattleweekly.com

LIFE PARTNERS Opens Fri., Jan. 9 at Seven Gables. Rated R. 93 minutes.