There’s no place like ‘Sweet Home Alabama’
- Share via
In this romantic comedy, Reese Witherspoon (“Election”,
“Pleasantville”) plays Melanie Carmichael an Alabama girl who moved
to New York City and built a career as a fashion designer. She
becomes engaged to the prominent mayor’s son, played by Patrick
Dempsey (“Run”, “Meatballs 3”, “Scream 3”). Having embraced
Yankeedom, she must first travel back to her hometown in what she now
believes to be the embarrassing South to tie up a loose end. Her
estranged husband Jack, played by Josh Lucas (“A Beautiful Mind”,
“The Deep End” and upcoming, “The Hulk”) is that loose end.
Director/Screenwriter Andy Tenant (“Anna and the King”, “It Takes
Two”) with the screenwriting assistance of rookies Douglas Eboch and
C. Jay Cox, does not seek to challenge the viewer. They fill the film
with happy cliches. This is a sappy, feel-good film, through and
through. The story’s message may not change your life or even mildly
resonate with you. I, being from Florida, could relate to
Witherspoon’s snooty Rebel-turned-Yankee character. If you don’t feel
like seeing the type of movie where every plot-line and character
enjoys a warm, rosy ending, then don’t go. Tenant’s light touch
allows for a veneer of humor to permeate the entire film, without
being outlandish. His hand can also be witnessed through the
magnificent chemistry between all of the key players. The excellent
supporting cast, (Rhona Mitra, Ethan Embry, Jean Smart, Katharine
Towne, Fred Ward, Mary Kay Place and Candice Bergen) along with the
scenery provide a trite, yet captivating backdrop for the story.
Witherspoon demonstrates why she is one of the most talented
actresses of her generation. As fluffy as the script is, she pulls
out a wonderful entrenched performance. Melanie’s journey of self
discovery takes her through segments of lighthearted banter, a scene
in which she drinks too much and says more than she should, as well
as a touching apology at a pet’s graveside. Witherspoon executes each
sequence with depth and proficiency. Her costar, Josh Lucas also
delights and mystifies as the husband who seems like he won’t give
up.
* RAY BUFFER, 33, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
‘The Tuxedo’
falls flat
His name is Tong, James Tong. OK, hapless Jackie Chan will never
have the suave sophistication of Sean Connery, but that’s what makes
“The Tuxedo” a lot of fun. Chan plays a cab driver whose reputation
for driving insanely fast gets him a job as the personal driver for a
secret agent. When his boss gets badly hurt in an assassination
attempt, Chan decides to step up and go after the assassins. Chan’s
character has no qualifications to be a secret agent. He doesn’t know
how to fight, or shoot a gun, and he lacks self-confidence. His ace
in the hole is his boss’s tuxedo. The tuxedo is an experimental piece
of high tech gadgetry that is programmed to do everything from
martial arts to imitating James Brown. With the tuxedo, and help from
Jennifer Love Hewitt, Chan discovers a fiendish plot to dominate the
world.
OK, the secret agent stuff in the story isn’t anything new or
special, but it’s basically just a vehicle for gags, so who cares?
The main issue that I have with this movie is that when you go to see
Chan, you expect to see stunt work that’s borderline suicidal. In
“The Tuxedo,” the stunts are toned down and a lot of them are done
with computer graphics. Maybe he just got sick of including hospital
time in his shooting schedules, but it’s a bit of a downer to see
Jackie Chan stoop to the same fakery as Jet Li. The action/fight
sequences are nothing amazing, but the movie makes up for it by being
funny.
Love Hewitt has great chemistry with Chan. She plays her part
straight and gets a lot of laughs. One of the things I like about
this movie is that it’s not constantly winking at you, telling you
when you are supposed to laugh. The characters are true to themselves
and the laughs come naturally. Both Love Hewitt and Chan are
oblivious in their own ways. She’s pathologically focused on being a
good agent and he’s clueless about the mission. Neither character
goes too far over the top, so there’s never an urge to throw the, “I
ain’t buying it,” flag. You just laugh at the absurdity of how they
handle what they are doing.
One of the things that makes Chan so endearing is that his
character is the total opposite of the kind of macho stereotype that
Vin Diesel plays in “XXX.” Chan is humble, shy, respectful and
self-effacing. He’s likable, which makes it easy to go with the flow
and have a good time. “The Tuxedo” isn’t a brilliant movie, but it’s
got its share of laughs. It’s not really worth $9, it’s worth renting
when it becomes available in a few months. My guess is the DVD will
be on the street by Thanksgiving.
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
‘Moonlight Mile’ stunning piece of work
How do you make a movie about a young woman’s violent death and
still manage to keep it uplifting and inspirational? “Moonlight Mile”
shows you. This is a stunning piece of work; a beautifully crafted
film that explores an ambitious range of moods you would never
imagine fitting so seamlessly inside the same movie.
Director Brad Silberling makes it clear that “Moonlight Mile”
isn’t about death, it’s about continuing to live despite it. Set
three days after the tragedy, we are instantly immersed in the
fallout. Most films would start with the shooting. There’s nothing
more dramatic in films than witnessing a murder, but Silberling knows
this is too easy.
Still in shock, the victim Diana’s fiance, Joe (Jake Gyllenhaal)
glances out at the normal world passing by his limousine window,
going about its business, refusing to grind to a halt despite the
tragedy he’s faced with. A few more scenes brings Joe’s dilemma fully
into focus: Does he continue the life he had planned out with Diana
or does he wipe the slate clean and forge a new one?
What makes “Moonlight Mile” so fascinating is how Silberling
contrasts Joe’s easy, nurturing relationship with Diana’s parents,
Jo-Jo (Susan Sarandon) and Ben (Dustin Hoffman), with the emotional
prison they have a desperate need to keep him locked in. Ben still
wants Joe to go into business with him, Jo-Jo allows him to sleep in
their dead daughter’s room, where the relics of her lost life both
comfort and haunt Joe. Jo-Jo and Ben want Joe to fill the gaping hole
Diana’s death has left behind in their family, and Joe’s own guilt
keeps him living there. All these factors are brought to an
inevitable head by Joe’s burgeoning relationship with Birdie (Ellen
Pompeo), who immediately recognizes Joe’s pain from first-hand
experience.
Silberling weaves all these threads together with such success,
never taking a wrong step. He finds the comedy in tragedy, knowing
the most heartfelt laughs are earned from an audience that relates to
honest human behavior. Every frame of “Moonlight Mile” is painted
with the details of a real family living real lives.
The acting is spectacular. I’ve always enjoyed Gyllenhaal in his
previous ventures, but not until now has he really delivered on his
potential. Hoffman and Sarandon delve into their roles, always
finding a deeper layer to overturn.
I was so swept up with the viewing experience that it was only on
later reflection that I realized how traditional the screenplay was;
it was carefully structured, but unfolded in an organic fashion.
Touchstone Pictures is unveiling “Moonlight Mile” with a slow-burn
strategy: open small and let word-of-mouth build. This usually means
they have Oscar in mind. My only disappointment with this movie would
be if it failed to pick up a few gold statuettes this March.
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 29, is currently working toward his master’s
degree in screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los
Angeles.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.