| Review Date: Director: Cameron Crowe Writer: Cameron Crowe Producers: Cameron Crowe, Tom Cruise, Paula Wagner Actors: Orlando Bloom as Drew Kirsten Dunst as Claire Susan Sarandon as Hollie |
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In previous Crowe offerings, I could always see myself in his characters. I could believe that these things and people could happen and exist, but other than the basic home-town stuff in this movie, I felt like several scenes were “phonied up” for cinematic viewing like when Bloom stands over his father’s casket and could only come up with the word “whimsical” to describe that moment (Huh??). The videotape that Bloom slaps into a VCR to stop the kids from screaming…which works! (but didn’t work for me) Susan Sarandon’s rambling and not-so-profound speech at her husband’s eulogy and ultimately, its biggest unreal moment, the final sequence which expects us to believe that some girl who just met a guy a few days ago, had the time to put together what appears to be a life-time photo-album, complete with CDs, pictures, graphics, maps, letters, etc… (overnight, it seems) and make it work for the other character. I don’t know, you might think that I’m just not “romantic” enough to appreciate it, but honestly…I thought the whole thing was more “creepy” than romantic. What kind of person puts that sort of thing together for someone? Felt like a stalker by that point. Everywhere Bloom turned in the movie…Dunst would show up unannounced. Honey…play a little “hard to get”…trust me, it works sometimes. I don’t know. She was also a little too “giddy” and “sarcastic” for a Crowe movie. If we’re really gonna get into this character, we gotta believe the things she’s saying. Most of the time she seemed to be joking or kidding or acting goofy. Might work in a romantic comedy, but not in a romantic drama.
I guess it’s those “little things” that ultimately left this film in the “so-so” pile for me, as opposed to the standard Cameron Crowe “awesome” pile. That said, the film does feature plenty of great songs, cool actors (Baldwin is awesome in his few scenes here), fun quirky dialogue and a nice, cozy feeling for anyone who enjoys roadtrips and family interactions. I also liked watching both Bloom and Dunst as their characters, but unfortunately, just didn’t buy or care for their relationship together. This film is almost like going through someone’s own personal photo album and enjoying everything so well organized, pretty and nice, only to not give a shit about halfway through since you’re not in it and the memories, well, they’re not yours and not necessarily relatable to you either, i.e. a room catches on fire during a man’s eulogy and the band keeps playing?? I don’t know what Crowe was thinking.