
The film starts out with a fairly standard set up: Holly (Katherine Heigl) and Messer (Josh Duhamel) are set up on a blind date by their mutual friends and from the first moment its apparent they are not a match. While she is dressed to the nines, Messer shows up an hour late looking hobo chic. They decide to go out anyway, but Holly calls it off after Messer takes gets a phone call confirming an appointment for a booty call later in the evening. While Holly would like nothing better than to never see him again, they are each best friends of married couple Peter (Hayes MacArthur) and Allison (Christina Hendricks). Holly and Messer keep bumping into each other at various social gatherings but their mutual dislike for each other is not a secret.
However, things take a turn for the serious when Peter and

And from this part on -- basically the middle section of the film -- is where the script by Ian Deitchman and Kristin Rusk Robinson goes in some potentially intriguing directions. Basically, they don't fall in love as you would expect. They both sleep in separate rooms in the house, go about their dream jobs (Holly runs a gourmet bakery and Messer is a technical director for the Atlanta Falcons), while splitting the duties of raising Sophie. Holly takes an interest in the local pediatrician Sam (Josh Lucas) while Messer continues his string of one night stands. Now living in the suburbs, they meet a gallery of neighbors, all of whom seem to underscore that the traditional family isn't all its cracked up to be. Each of the couples they encounter seem trapped in relationships now driven by their offspring with their former ambitions and dreams dashed. And just when the film seems to settle on an ending that is both bittersweet and mature, the film lumbers on for another twenty minutes where you can practically hear Warner Bros. executives shaping the conclusion as if they're reading directly from test screening comment cards.


"Life As We Know It" might see some better than average reviews merely because it's better than what the misleading trailers are selling. It's definitely far more dramatic, and even more complex than it seems, but as the running time goes on, any initial spark it may have had is quickly deadened by a turn to the conventional. "Life As You Know It" ultimately becomes pretty much everything you likely expected. [C+]
0 comments:
Post a Comment