To be clear, Owen Wilson's character in this movie is not meant to be a direct analog of Bob Ross, who has been canonized among the likes of Mr. Rogers and Steve Irwin for his kindness and gentle nature. But there are similarities.
Wilson's character, Carl Nargle, does a painting show on the PBS member station in Burlington, Vermont, creating landscape paintings while he chats with viewers in a calming whisper. Even though he paints the same mountain over and over again, people like him. Then one day the station manager fires him so they can bring in a young lady who paints faster and better. This makes Carl jealous and upends his comfortable life of local celebrity. If you want to know where Carl's soul-searching leads him and what the deal is with the mountain he keeps painting, you will have to watch this movie for yourself. It's a quote-unquote dramedy, and being an indie film, it is also highly quirky. If you have ninety-five minutes to spare, watching this movie will not be a waste.
Bottom line: Not hilarious, but kind of funny; not compelling, but worth a watch.
Watch again? Why do I force this dumb review template on myself. Uh, sure. I would watch it again, I guess. Like I wouldn't go out of my way to watch it, but I would watch it if the conditions were right.