| Review Date: Director: Guy Ritchie Writer: Guy Ritchie Producers: Matthew Vaughn Actors: Madonna as Amber Adriano Giannini as Giuseppe Bruce Greenwood as Paycheck |
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Unfortunately for everyone, the tale eventually leads The Material Beeyatch to a deserted island on which she and co-star Adriano Giannini (a poor man’s Antonio Banderas) begin what can only be described as one of the least credible courtships ever put to the screen. The love/hate thing is serviceable at first (we all dug it when Sam and Diane went back and forth like that on “Cheers”, right?), but when the slapping starts, the kicking ensues and the natural progression is made to the always-hilarious…attempted rape, you begin to fully appreciate why studios don’t like to greenlight wife/husband movies. Of course, attempted rape generally leads to love and with about half an hour to kill and zero story left to resolve, the comedy suddenly (as sudden as the people fleeing from our theater) switched gears completely and became…you guessed it– a full-blown “romantic” drama with tears, love, separations and slow-mo chases. Gag me with a friggin’ spoon and someone please remind Guy Ritchie to lay off the lager while penning his next screenplay, or at the very least, to return to his usual witty, quirky, charming self after this unforgettable debacle. The final 15 minutes of the film, during which several audience members could actually be heard crying…with laughter (alright, I was one of them), as characters divulged their undying love for one another, seemed like it was ripped right out of one of those melodramatic soap operas, aging leading lady and all. What’s good about the movie? Not much, to be honest. Some of the one-liners between the two leads were somewhat amusing, Madonna seemed to have had a blast (playing herself?) as the uber-bitch and the deserted island and beach were gorgeous, but what the heck happened to the rest of the movie? My God!
Guy, Guy, Guy…what happened to you, buddy? Where’s the style? Where’s the energy? Where’s the interesting story, the slick editing, the empathetic characters, the good ending, the wonderful tunes, the direction, the…anything?!? Honestly, I am convinced that this film was not directed by the same man who created SNATCH. I am convinced until I see an interview with him stating, in fact, that he is the man accountable for this fiasco (damn…saw him on Larry King tonight…he admitted it). Oh God, and I almost forgot to mention the unbelievably hilarious ending, which was so bad that I actually turned to the person sitting next to me and said “Wouldn’t it be funny if the film just ended on this horrible note…it would be like the rotten cherry on top of this splendid piece of shit” and as the words were still coming out of my mouth, the credits started to roll. Stunning. A perfect flaming pie of shit. Some guy even tried to spit on the screen on his way out (I couldn’t reach it though). I’m telling you ladies and germs, even some nip-action from one of Madonna’s hooters couldn’t save this submarine (nice ass, though!) And I’m one of those assholes who actually liked THE NEXT BEST THING! PS: If you pay real close attention, you can actually see actor Bruce Greenwood cashing his paycheck for his role in the background of one scene. Needless to say, he and Jeanne Tripplehorn are shamefully wasted in this disaster.