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(2004) rt: 106m *
Director: Forest Whitaker
Starring: Katie Holmes, Michael Keaton
Tagline: The girl who always stood out is finally getting the chance
to fit in.
So Katie Holmes might have been
on my imaginary "if I were to stray for a Hollywood starlette"
list. That was before she fell for Mr. You Don't Know the History
of Psychiatry and showed her flair for communicable diseases and crazed
smiles. And it was before I saw this piece of shit movie. Not that
it was completely her fault, but she has fallen like two levels from
top tier to like Amanda
Peet or Rachel
Weisz levels. Shit, she may like in the Moira
Kelly or Mary-Louise
Parker strata at this point. Point being, this movie sucked enough
to make me question my taste in both film and women. The oddest part
about me wasting 92 minutes of my life watching this disaster was
that I had an amazing feeling I had seen it before, yet I watched
on. And then I realized that I hadn't in fact seen this movie, but
it's evil twin, Chasing
Liberty. No joke, they are the exact same movie. They even
came out the same year--and the working title of Chasing Liberty
was (drumroll please) First Daughter. Whew, that's more awkward
than showing up to a wedding in the same dress as some other dude
(it happens). Both movies revolve around the teenage daughter of the
president. Both are predictably restless in their sheltered lives
constantly surrounded by Secret Service. In this movie the daughter
goes to college instead of Europe, but both soon find their lives
too constrictive with all the protection--both from their fathers
and the dudes with earpieces and guns. Enter the mysterious male character
who is inexplicably allowed to get very close to the first daughter
without interference from security. Hmmm, that seems fishy. But not
to our brilliant girls! Of course they can outsmart trained professionals
by wearing hooded sweatshirts, sneaking out windows and driving scooters
real fast. Hmm, might her love--who also mysteriously replaces her
RA--be a duplicitous agent posing as a student to trick her into thinking
she has free will, when in fact she is being watched by the people
from which she thinks she is escaping? Why not, right? When she tries
to kiss him (she is still hot, regardless of my earlier denials),
does she really think he's saying it's "against the rules"
because he's her damn RA? [MF, HBO]
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