Director: Peter
Sollett | Starring:
Michael Cera, Kat Dennings, Alexis Dziena
Released: 2008
| Runtime: 90m
| Rating (out of 5):
***½ |
|
Yes, I know this movie
is made for tweens or young hipsters or some crowd that certainly
isn't me, but it was available on Netflix instant play (via the Roku)
and seemed like a perfect candidate for background fodder while I
surfed The Superficial
and paid bills. And then, in the ultimate praise for a no-brainer
movie, I managed to drop everything I was supposed to do and actually
watched this love story set to the tunes of a twenty-something Brooklynite's
iPod.
My initial draw to this film is its cutesy hand drawn poster. Then
there's the promise of good music. Then there's Michael Cera, whom
I always find endlessly entertaining, funny and vaguely iconic. Add
to that one of the few good things from The
House Bunny and a film guaranteed to be filmed in and around spots
in Manhattan and Brooklyn and you have something that can certainly
make me ignore yet another Kim Kardasian bikini spread for any day.
The plot is a simple one. Dorky guy in a band falls for and dates
the wrong girl. He makes pathetic CD mixes for said girl in volumes,
which said girl doesn't appreciate for the labor of love they are.
Sounding familiar (on both a movie and personal level) yet? Enter
new girl who appreciates this boy's earnestness, taste in music and
caring soul. Bad girl and new girl are acquaintances and end up in
the same place as sensitive boy where wackiness ensues and true soul
mates are unveiled. Then much pursued desire, backstepping and a misunderstood
queercore, drummerless band later and couples and heartbeeps are figured
out. Meanwhile my indie rock iTunes playlist chimes in the background.
This is ultimately the 2008 version of Some
Kind of Wonderful--or was it Pretty
in Pink? Actually it’s neither, and Cera is more Anthony
Michael Hall than John
Cryer or Eric
Stoltz, but it kind of evokes that genre of film with a decidedly
modern and less fairytale slant. I’m still creeped out by the
weird, skinny chick (Alexis Dziena) whom I first became aware of on
Entourage.
I find it strange that she gets movie parts, but I guess I’m
not her core audience. Kat Dennings, on the other hand, is terrific
in the movie as the rich Jewish girl from NJ with no attitude, who
actually looks like a real human being and not a be-skirted skeleton.
This movie certainly isn’t going to change anyone’s life,
but there’s room for sweetness out there, and this movie has
it in spades. [Netflix On Demand]
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