Someone Like You
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 23 March
2001
Here's
Hoping
Poor
Jane Goodale (Ashley Judd). She just can't get a date in New York.
She's got a good job booking talent for a popular TV talk show, nice
enough apartment, great wardrobe, and, of course, a chatty and
sympathetic best friend, Liz (Marisa Tomei). In other words, Jane is
a character in a '00s romantic comedy, and so, she will endure some
ninety minutes worth of joke-worthy heartache and loss before she
will find the man of her dreams, who has been right under her nose
all along, only disguised as the opposite of the someone she's
looking for.
This
is, of course, a familiar strategy in romantic comedies, one that
makes them rather like buddy movies, only without the high-tech
weaponry and car chases. From Bringing Up Baby to My Man
Godfrey and Save the Last Dance to The Wedding Planner,
the emotional trajectory of partners-to-be in this genre is
predictable, and when you don't follow the rules, as Chasing Amy
or Forces of Nature were brave enough to do, the consequences
are usually dire, that is, quick -- and infamous -- box office
failure.
Someone
Like You
is not out to break any rules; in fact, it's more inclined to
reinvent them. Based on Laura Zigman's best-selling novel, Animal
Husbandry, the film offers a standard plot, in which Jane's
inability to find a decent guy is made clear by a preliminary
disastrous relationship. There are any number of cues that her
boyfriend Ray is a bad choice, not least being that he's played by
Greg Kinnear, who's made a bit of a career out of playing exactly
this self-interested, glib, superficially charming character (even
in the A Smile Like Yours, where he was the romantic lead, he
acted glib and self-interested).
And,
even if you grant that Jane has somehow managed never to see a Greg
Kinnear movie, you'd hope she'd take notice of Ray's corny khakis
and smirky facial expressions, not to mention his general inability
to focus on her. But she's so giddy and cute, so happy to be with
him -- literally blowing dust off her diaphragm for their first
sexual encounter -- that you almost wish it would work out. But then
you see the cheesy romantic montagey sequence, where the couple
spends time in the park and in bed, making googly eyes and giggling
like the proverbial school-kids, just twenty minutes into the movie,
and you know that it's all too good to last.
Indeed,
there's a wrench in the works from the start, and that is that Ray
has a girlfriend, whose invisibility is mostly fine with Jane.
Trying to mollify her own sense that something's amiss, Jane spends
much of this early part of the movie with Liz, which is great
because Marisa Tomei is so delightful and Liz is slightly less mushy
a character than Jane -- but then you might start to wish that maybe
Liz was the protagonist rather than the best friend, or better, that
Liz and Jane might hook up.
By
that time, the movie is galumphing headlong toward Jane's second
romance, which is hindered briefly by her immediate response to the
Ray fiasco, which comes when they're supposed to move into a
fabulous apartment together and he decides to dump her and go back
to the first girlfriend. In desperate need of a place to live and a
way to make Ray jealous, Jane moves in -- as roommates only -- with
another guy from work, the dashingly handsome and relentlessly
womanizing Eddie (Hugh Jackman, a.k.a. X-Men's Wolverine,
another fellow whose movie history might give pause).
Once
ensconced at Eddie's place, she observes his behavior (short
version: he brings home a different girl every night), correlates it
with Ray's, reads a few anthropology books, and watches
"Discovery Channel" documentaries on mammalian mating
habits. Mixed with her anger and frustration, all this activity
results in what she calls the "New Cow Theory" (the very
formulation that structures Zigman's book, and provides the film
with a book-like frontispiece and some journal-like entries for
exposition). This is actually a very old theory dressed up in cutesy
black and white hide -- men sow their seed and women want
commitment. But it is a theory that, as Jane points out, allows her
to believe that it's not her fault that she has only met the wrong
guys, because there simply are no right ones.
As
everyday as it is, this idea might pass for okay if the film wasn't
so hung up on it. For a minute, it looks like Someone Like You
might take this overripe and silly theory to task, when Jane writes
it up as a pseudonymous column for the glossy men's magazine where
Liz is an editor. The column hits a popular nerve and suddenly the
non-existent author is sought out by talk show hosts, including
Jane's diva-boss, Diane (Ellen Barkin). You see where this part of
the movie is going, and unfortunately, it doesn't have time along
the way to critique the pop-culture industry that makes stars out of
people who know how to market bad ideas for lots of money.
Instead,
Someone Like You follows formula, which means that Jane will
realize her folly and realize that Eddie is really the guy for her
(this is telegraphed when the pretty couple shares their feelings
and eats Chinese food while seated on the kitchen counter and
dressed in their fashionable underwear). For all this business as
usual, the film features a couple of secondary storyline moments,
especially having to do with a crisis suffered by Jane's sister and
brother-in-law, which puts her "ordeal" in perspective.
Poignant without being too goopy, these moments show that director
Tony Goldwyn retains the subtle, unsentimental touch that he brought
to his first film, the terrific A Walk on the Moon. And that
makes you hope that his next film won't be so constrained by generic
patterns.
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Directed by:
Tony Goldwyn
Starring:
Ashley Judd
Hugh Jackman
Greg Kinnear
Marisa Tomei
Ellen Barkin
Written
by:
Laura Zigman Elizabeth Chandler
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned
Some material ma
be inappropriate for
children under 13
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