We all have a Joe in our lives. Hell, most of us have a little Joe inside ourselves. You know the type: buried with work, paralyzed by habit, and swears he鈥檚 up for a weekend adventure but can鈥檛 quite get himself out the door. The guy who, having watched on the big screen, is convinced that any hike is going to culminate in a self-amputation with a dull pocket knife.
What do you do with this guy? How do you help him find his adventurous聽inner Joe?
Independent filmmaker Tom Huang聽meditates on these very questions in his utterly lovable new feature-length movie聽, now available for streaming on Amazon. In the opening scenes, we meet Joe, a divorc茅 artfully played by Huang himself. Middle-class inertia defines him: the same daily uniform of khaki pants and a blue button-down shirt, the same daily routine of crunching numbers in an L.A. high-rise, followed by the same take-out chicken combo with steamed veggies and fries, eaten in front of the television before falling asleep on the same beige couch.
The only real color in Joe鈥檚 life comes from his work wife, Amelia, an effervescent adventurer played by Iranian-Colombian actress Sara Amini. While Joe trudges through his day, Amelia is sparkle and light, quoting characters from Friends and jetting off to visit bears in the Lake Tahoe basin or to hike peaks around the world. It鈥檚 a life Joe envies聽but has no idea how to actualize for himself. Instead聽he shrinks his existence, settling for bus tours of the Grand Canyon with his aging parents and nature documentaries on TV.
Amelia, realizing that Joe聽has can鈥檛聽fathom聽how to get outside like she does, gives him three simple rules to get started:
- Every destination should be a place in nature that is unique and amazing.
- Outings should be relatively easy鈥攏o brutal hikes, no big mountains to climb, no crazy equipment or chance of falling to your death.
- The experience should be your own鈥攏o touristy places or crowds.
When even adventures based on these three rules feel overwhelming to Joe, Amelia does the only thing left in her wheelhouse: she disappears, leaving him a string of clues in the form of video diaries and GPS pin drops with which to find her.

What results is an epic road trip from Zion National Park to Yosemite, beautifully filmed with sweeping vantages and clever drone shots set to a charming soundtrack, including the breathy Dia Frampton and the recently disbanded South African indie-pop band Gangs of Ballet. Along the way, we follow Joe through slot canyons and desert basins as he learns firsthand what it means to be a traveler and not a tourist.
鈥淪o many positive things come out of experiences in the wild, and yet most people would rather talk about it than actually do it,鈥 Huang told me by phone while wrapping up a recent film-festival tour. 鈥淚 thought if I could make Joe鈥檚 journey beautiful and accessible on the big screen, it would push people to live their own adventures.鈥澛
Huang, in addition to being a hiker and climber himself, has also worked as a staff writer on sitcoms including Still Standing and Sons and Daughters and is the writer-director of two previous films. Working with a tiny crew and what Huang calls a microbudget (under $100,000), he selected destinations that were both familiar to him and easily accessible to viewers looking to follow Amelia鈥檚 guidebook. 鈥淚 felt like I had to back up what I was saying with the message of the film. I had to prove that these destinations are epic and not technically difficult,鈥 says Huang.聽
To support the message, Find Me鈥檚 website includes more in-depth details聽for anyone wanting to hike some of the destinations depicted in the film, including spots like . It鈥檚 all a highly effective reminder that real meaning can come from an easy outdoor grab, whether it鈥檚 car camping under the stars or a day hike in a local park.
Refreshingly, this message is one that Find Me conveys without any sense of sermon or sanctimony. Instead, viewers are treated to well-timed comic bits, including a fantastic scene featuring an immensely unhelpful Lego-building motel desk clerk played by Utah musician Blackhawk Walters. Or another in which Joe, looking to help Amelia鈥檚 sister, Helena (Krizia Bajos), breaks into her ex-boyfriend鈥檚 house and ends up staging a diversion by impersonating a confused Asian tourist.
鈥淲hatever crazy Chinese accent you were doing out there was straight up racist, dude,鈥 Helena chides him afterward.
鈥淐ome on,鈥 Joe聽responds, 鈥淚 was imitating my dad.鈥
There鈥檚 great emotional range here as well, even from Amelia鈥檚 supposedly douchebag husband (Ben Gavin), who after an altercation with Joe聽over his missing wife, mournfully asks, 鈥淗ave you ever just had someone stop loving you?鈥 You can鈥檛 help but feel for this guy鈥檚 heartbreak. We see it in Joe, too, who slowly comes to terms with the dissolution of his marriage. We see it in the complicated relationships Amelia has left in her wake. And we feel it most of all in the realization that this treasure hunt she鈥檚 planned for Joe has a far more serious, far more somber impetus.
And that, I think, is my favorite aspect of Find Me. As much as we鈥檇 all like to believe that our problems will slip away the minute we are on trail, that鈥檚 rarely the case. But sometimes we find a way to hold that sadness while still finding聽beauty and adventure聽in the natural world.
Find Me is a great reminder of how to do just that. Watch it to cheer on Joe as he finds himself again,聽to celebrate just how beautiful even hardscrabble wilderness can be,聽and maybe most of all to remind yourself where your own inner Joe resides. My bet is he lives somewhere way outside.