Courteney Cox's feature directorial debut mixes humor and tragedy

Courteney Cox's movie 'Just Before I Go' stars Seann William Scott. Courteney Cox currently stars on the TBS show 'Cougar Town.'

Courteney Cox makes her feature directorial debut with the movie 'Just Before I Go.'

Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

May 8, 2014

Courteney Cox's directorial debut is uniquely personal. It features a cameo from her daughter, Coco, songs by her boyfriend, Snow Patrol's Johnny McDaid, and a scene with her ex-husband, David Arquette.

The film opens with 9-year-old Coco singing a song of McDaid's. Later, she briefly appears to spray her father, Arquette, with a hose. As a proud mother, it's Cox's favorite scene.

"I couldn't have cut that out," said Cox. "If I needed four seconds, that would be the last four seconds to go."

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

Cox premiered the film, "Just Before I Go," the Tribeca Film Festival. It's the first stab at feature-film directing for the 49-year-old TV star, who readied herself for the opportunity by directing a short, a Lifetime movie, and 10 episodes of her TBS sitcom "Cougar Town."

"Just Before I Go" stars Seann William Scott as a depressive who plans to commit suicide but first returns to his hometown to get "my house in order." He visits an old crush, a school bully from his youth, and others to unload his pain in a strange kind of bucket-list mission.

It may sound like a serious drama, but "Just Before I Go" (written by David Flebotte) has an offbeat humor that clashes comically with its heavy outline.

"It's hard to get those subject matters to gel and for people to feel it's OK to laugh here and it's OK to cry there," Cox said in a recent interview. "If I can laugh really hard and then cry, it's perfect for me."

"The more offensive the humor, the funnier it is to me," she added. "For whatever reason, if someone's not getting hurt, it's probably not funny to me."

A majority of Americans no longer trust the Supreme Court. Can it rebuild?

Of course, Cox's comic timing has long been on display in "Friends," ''Family Ties," ''Dirt" (on which she met Flebotte) and "Cougar Town," which recently wrapped its fifth and possibly final season. (Its future is uncertain.)

But Cox didn't want to act in "Just Before I Go," but rather concentrated on directing – a role she says feels natural.

"I'm obsessed with design and I really feel like I suffer from acute awareness," said Cox. "I'm always so aware of my surroundings. I'm so interested in the way people live. Whenever I walk in someplace, I can almost tell you what the rooms looked like before I could tell you a person's name."

Shot in a speedy 23 days in between seasons of "Cougar Town," ''Just Before I Go" was made for less than $2 million, which Cox initially financed herself.

"Not having the pressure of the studio, just doing it for myself," said Cox, "it was the perfect way in for me."