Think back with me to the wilds of 2004, when Zach Braff – at the height of his Scrubs powers – wrote and directed a little movie called Garden State. The film, about a disaffected actor who returns to New Jersey to bury his mother, was a success both critically and financially, and seemed to signal the beginning of a filmmaking career for the sitcom star. Now, ten years later (almost to the week), Braff’s sophomore effort, Wish I Was Here – about a disaffected actor who has to deal with the prospect of burying his father – has finally seen the light of day.