LOS ANGELES — Comedian Kyle Mooney excels at playing sheepish, oddball man-children on “Saturday Night Live.”

They’re not the obnoxious, inappropriate bros that made his buddy Andy Samberg famous. Rather, Mooney embodies sensitivity, adding empathy to men instinctively patronized as sad sacks.

Mooney successfully returns to the well in “Brigsby Bear.” He stars as James, a sheltered young adult living with his overly protective parents, Ted (Mark Hamill) and April (Jane Adams). James hasn’t grown up, still reading by flashlight or sneaking out of his room after his bedtime. However, after a traumatic night, James quickly learns Ted and April kidnapped him as a child. He remembers nothing and doesn’t particularly care his faux parents abducted him.

All that matters for James is the fictional children’s program “Brigsby Bear.”

The setup works. Mooney and co-writer Kevin Costello poke fun at cheesy children’s programs like “Barney & Friends” or “Teletubbies” that drill moral lessons into simplistic everyday conundrums.

“Brigsby Bear” the movie is certainly no everyday conundrum. First-time screenwriters Costello and Mooney offer a new perspective on the captivity film. Namely, they take what could be a three-minute “SNL” parody, remove the condescending tone and add sympathy. James never knew he’d been kidnapped as a baby, so, of course, he has little reason to despise his captors. They raised him as a healthy, loved child. It’s the sensational, aggressive American culture that scares him.

Director Dave McCary and Mooney are members of the sketch comedy group Good Neighbor and work at “SNL.” “Brigsby Bear” is McCary’s first feature-length directorial debut, and he takes smart risks. McCary interweaves stop-animation drawings into the live-action film, which adds to the theme of legitimacy in childhood interests. While minimal, it works.

It’s the other Good Neighbor involvements that don’t. Comedian Nick Rutherford is little more than just a plot point as Excited Man, an overzealous fan. The fourth and final member, Beck Bennett, plays Deputy Bander, a cop investigating James’ abduction.

Fans coming for the comedians will likely recognize Hamill as the guy from “Star Wars.” A heartbreaking scene between the newly jailed Ted and James cements Hamill as a legendary actor outside of an iconic franchise that often fails to indulge his emotional range.

Ted is not a vicious kidnapper; he’s a man who just wanted to be a father and illicitly succeeded. It’s the same desire of James’ birth parents, played by Michaela Watkins and Matt Walsh, who transcend at wrangling their trauma alongside James’ apathy. Watkins proves once again a short tenure on “SNL” isn’t career destruction.

The film offers no true surprises. And yet it’s highly aware by intentionally finding humor and happiness in a dark tale. “Brigsby Bear” offers a glimpse on what makes Mooney and his man-child persona work. There’s strength in embracing awkward, childlike wonder.