February 11, 2009 9:31 PM
- Text
Wedding Planner Tops Movie Menu
(CBS)
Mary Fiore (Jennifer Lopez) is the Patton of wedding planners. She knows enough about nuptials to fill a thousand photo albums and is so confident in her knowledge that she tames the most monstrous of fledgling mother-in-laws.
But Mary fights her matrimonial battles far better on the map than in reality, so when she bumps into pediatrician Steve Edison (Matthew McConaughey), the loneliness of her one-woman war to achieve the perfect wedding becomes painfully clear, so much so that she can't help falling for him even though he's a client.
That's the premise, anyway, of The Wedding Planner, one of this weekend's five debuting films. Lopez had a crackling chemistry with her last leading man, George Clooney, in 1998's Out of Sight, and McConaughey, whose laid-back charm suggests a latter-day James Garner, could mix well with her in this PG-13 film.
Light romantic comedies, especially those that aspire to be sophisticated, need as much wit and sparkle behind the camera as in front of it, and one wonders whether first-time Director Adam Shankman, who was a choreographer and physical comedy consultant for Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo, Dudley Do-Right, and Inspector Gadget, has the flair to pull that off.
At the other end of the spectrum, perhaps, is Sugar & Spice, a PG-13-rated black comedy about a high school cheerleading squad that descends to robbery to help out when one of them becomes pregnant. Ostensibly a play on the whitebread values cheerleaders represent, S & S stars Marley Shelton, Mena Suvari (who was last seen as a cheerleader in American Beauty), Marla Sokoloff, Alexandra Holden and Sean Young. It sounds like a cross between Romy and Michelle's High School Reunion and The Brinks Job.
The Faithless is former Bergman star Liv Ullman's directorial examination of how an affair between happily-married Marianne Vogler (Lena Endre) and a family friend (Krister Henriksson) damages the lives of all concerned. It's rated R and features some nudity and naughty language.
Two Ninas is a comedy about a New York writer (Ron Livingston) who goes from having a desolate social life to an overcrowded one, thanks to the aforementioned two Ninas (Cara Buono and Amanda Peet). It's rated R for some naughty language.
In limited release is Series 7: The Contenders, what looks to be a savage satire on reality-based TV shows. It is a drama and rated R for violence.
By Nick Sambides Jr
But Mary fights her matrimonial battles far better on the map than in reality, so when she bumps into pediatrician Steve Edison (Matthew McConaughey), the loneliness of her one-woman war to achieve the perfect wedding becomes painfully clear, so much so that she can't help falling for him even though he's a client.
That's the premise, anyway, of The Wedding Planner, one of this weekend's five debuting films. Lopez had a crackling chemistry with her last leading man, George Clooney, in 1998's Out of Sight, and McConaughey, whose laid-back charm suggests a latter-day James Garner, could mix well with her in this PG-13 film.
Light romantic comedies, especially those that aspire to be sophisticated, need as much wit and sparkle behind the camera as in front of it, and one wonders whether first-time Director Adam Shankman, who was a choreographer and physical comedy consultant for Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo, Dudley Do-Right, and Inspector Gadget, has the flair to pull that off.
At the other end of the spectrum, perhaps, is Sugar & Spice, a PG-13-rated black comedy about a high school cheerleading squad that descends to robbery to help out when one of them becomes pregnant. Ostensibly a play on the whitebread values cheerleaders represent, S & S stars Marley Shelton, Mena Suvari (who was last seen as a cheerleader in American Beauty), Marla Sokoloff, Alexandra Holden and Sean Young. It sounds like a cross between Romy and Michelle's High School Reunion and The Brinks Job.
The Faithless is former Bergman star Liv Ullman's directorial examination of how an affair between happily-married Marianne Vogler (Lena Endre) and a family friend (Krister Henriksson) damages the lives of all concerned. It's rated R and features some nudity and naughty language.
Two Ninas is a comedy about a New York writer (Ron Livingston) who goes from having a desolate social life to an overcrowded one, thanks to the aforementioned two Ninas (Cara Buono and Amanda Peet). It's rated R for some naughty language.
In limited release is Series 7: The Contenders, what looks to be a savage satire on reality-based TV shows. It is a drama and rated R for violence.
By Nick Sambides Jr
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