Review Date:
Director: Garry Marshall
Writer: Jack Amiel, Michael Begler
Producers: Ashok Amritraj
Actors:
Kate Hudson as Helen Joan Cusack as Jenny John Corbett as Pastor Dan |
I only saw this film about an hour ago and I’ve already forgotten most of it. Other than one cute “date” scene, in which Corbett asks Hudson out for the first time, the film doesn’t provide for any real laughs either, with only a handful of chuckles making their way into the final print. On the serious side of things, a couple of confrontation scenes between Hudson and Cusack don’t work, and actually showed me where Hudson’s acting skills may be lacking. She might need to take a role of greater substance after all of these “cutesy” parts. That said, she does continue to hold up the Goldie Hawn “great ass” gene, a quality that the filmmakers didn’t mind exploiting for the film’s eye-catching poster. Unlike the great sequence with Ben Affleck in the aforementioned JERSEY GIRL, no sober scenes dealing with the loss of the parents is ever delved into either, taking us even further away from the characters and their emotions. I wanted to feel their pain! Oddly enough, the film’s first half was actually weaker and less engaging than its second half, which managed to pull me in a little, but even then, not in any major way. One particular emotional backlash between Hudson and Corbett is actually resolved during a…musical montage! That’s right, the audience isn’t even given any dialogue to explain the resolution. In the end, I can’t say that there was anything entertaining enough in this film to recommend to anyone other than your average soccer mom with time to kill between her kids’ practices. I love mothers as much as the next guy (oh boy, do I ever!), but they deserve a lot more credit than this dinky film tries to pass off, and so do your hard-earned bucks. A late night, cheapie, fourth-video rental with your girl…if that!
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