Review: Safe Haven

Last Updated on August 2, 2021

PLOT: Katie (Julianne Hough) is a young woman on the run, who lands in a sleepy North Carolina town, and tries to start a new life. She quickly falls for Alex (Josh Duhamel) – a widowed father of two- but their bliss is threatened by Katie’s past.


REVIEW: SAFE HAVEN is a return to the Nicholas Sparks well for director Lasse Hallstrom, after making DEAR JOHN a few years ago. SAFE HAVEN is being hyped as a departure for Sparks, with this adding some thriller elements into the mix. Basically, this is a really tame version of SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY, mixed in with Sparks’ usual small-town, folksy idealized romance. Like in THE NOTEBOOK, DEAR JOHN, THE LUCKY ONE, etc- the characters are less like real people than idealized romantic stereotypes, with Duhamel’s widowed father being particularly saintly. Anyone wanna bet the doe-eyed Hough is going to fall for the single dad? Yeah- thought so…

Then again, you don’t exactly walk into a Sparks adaptation expecting BLUE VALENTINE, and for about half of SAFE HAVEN, its no worse than other big-screen adaptations of his work (heck- I even kinda liked THE NOTEBOOK). Hough and Duhamel are a pretty, but bland pair- although they do well enough with the simple, predictable material. Cobie Smulders, in the bland “best friend” part livens things up a bit, but even she can’t make something out of nothing- which is exactly what she gets to work with here. For his part, Hallstrom seems to be on autopilot, and it’s sad to think that this movie- which is really no better directed than your run-of-the-mill Lifetime TV-movie, comes from the director of WHAT’S EATING GILBERT GRAPE, MY LIFE AS A DOG, THE CIDER HOUSE RULES, THE HOAX, and other- far better films. Still, it’s not awful.


That is- it’s not awful until the second hour, when the thriller aspect of the film starts to take over. Just in case anyone reading this has a hankering to go so it, or is dragged by their significant other, I’ll try not to give too much away. But- the so-called “thriller” part of the film is really bad, with the sweaty, crazy-eyed cop pursuing Hough (David Lyons) obviously being up to no good. It all climaxes in a big 4th of July fireworks display/fire that doesn’t offer the slightest amount of tension, and in fact- is eye-rollingly bad in its clichés.

However- that’s not the worst part of SAFE HAVEN. Not by a long shot. The worst part of SAFE HAVEN is the final, ridiculous twist that’s probably the most unintentionally hilarious ending since the jaw-dropping stupidity of REMEMBER ME’s September 11th twist. This isn’t quite as off-the-wall, but it’s just as bad. Oh well- dumb as this ending is, at least it’s not bland, which is more than I can say for the rest of the movie. Fact is- a Nicholas Sparks adaptation plays to a specific audience, and if THE LUCKY ONE or DEAR JOHN had you reaching for your hankies, you’ll probably get some mild enjoyment out of this. If, like me- all the Sparks adaptations tend to blur into one big generic movie, you’d be well advised to skip this. Heck- even as a date movie it’s a failure. Stay home and rent THE NOTEBOOK instead.

Safe Haven

TERRIBLE

3
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Source: JoBlo.com

About the Author

Chris Bumbray began his career with JoBlo as the resident film critic (and James Bond expert) way back in 2007, and he has stuck around ever since, being named editor-in-chief in 2021. A voting member of the CCA and a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, you can also catch Chris discussing pop culture regularly on CTV News Channel.