Yapım :2006 Ülke : Amerika Tür : Comedy Süre : 124 dakika IMDB Puan : 5.6/10 IMDB ID: tt0395495
Oyuncular Jennifer Garner, Gray Wheeler
Timothy Olyphant, Fritz
Sam Jaeger, Dennis
Kevin Smith, Sam
Juliette Lewis, Maureen
Joshua Friesen, Mattie
Fiona Shaw, Mrs. Douglas
Tina Lifford, Eve
Georgia Craig, Persephone
Christopher Redman, Flower Delivery Guy
Bilgi :Catch and Release is the sort of movie I'd rather not have to review. Not because I didn't enjoy iton the contrary, I laughed and almost-cried and rooted for the romance, heartily. It's just that the review process forces the analysis of pesky details like consistent character and plot development. But Catch and Release is best enjoyed on the surfacea big-hearted light-headed story that isn't as deep as it wants to be, but still manages to entertain.
The film opens with the funeral of Grady Douglas, a young man tragically killed in a boating accident days before his wedding. Jennifer Garner (Alias, 13 Going on 30, Elektra) plays Gray Wheeler, Grady's grieving bride, who must bear the heavy irony of burying the man she loves on the day she was planning to marry him. The wake is almost more than Gray can take, particularly when a floral truck bearing the inscription "Flowers for All Occasions" is sent away to exchange bridal bouquets for funeral wreaths.
Jennifer Garner as Gray Wheeler
Misery loves company, and Gray soon finds herself in the company of Grady's closest friends and former housemates. Kevin Smith (Clerks, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back) has all the film's best lines as Sam, a Kevin Smith-esque, food-obsessed wise guy with a tender side. Sam still shares the house with Dennis (Sam Jaeger), the reliable and responsible good guy whose emotional burden includes not only grief for his fallen friend but a long-hidden love for Gray. When she can't pay the rent on the home she and Grady were to have lived in together, Sam and Dennis invite Gray to move into Grady's old room and stay as long as she likes.
Gray is unpleasantly surprised to discover that she is not the only houseguest. Fritz (Timothy Olyphant) is a friend of Grady's from L.A., and Gray has seen just enough of him to have him pegged as a sleazy lothario. But when Gray begins to uncover unsettling information about Grady's past, Fritz turns out to be an important source of information. He also turns out to be a different sort of man than she thought he was.
Kevin Smith almost steals the movie as Sam
For the most part, it's not too hard to figure out where Catch and Release is going, but getting there is a frequently pleasant trip. With Julia Roberts off having babies and Meg Ryan seemingly in romcom retirement, Garner steps into the void with all the adorable pathos and endearing vulnerability we could ask for. Timothy Olyphant (TV's Deadwood) comes on strong as the roguish Fritz, flashing sly grins to rival Dennis Quaid's and even revealing some rather heart-rending self-loathing early in the film. The chemistry between Garner and Olyphant produces sparks almost dazzling enough to blind us to the improbabilityeven the unseemlinessof a romance so soon after Grady's death.
Smith's smart but lazy Sam is a familiar character, but Smith makes him both funnier and more nuanced than the stereotype warrants. The sequence in which he awkwardly receives a massage from Juliette Lewis' flaky New Age therapist is worth the price of admission. In fact, Smith steals almost all of the movie, misfiring only once in an unfortunately "serious" hospital scene in which we can feel him acting.
Timothy Olyphant as Fritz
Catch and Release was written and directed by Susannah Grant, an Oscar-nominated writer who crafted the screenplays for Erin Brockovich, In Her Shoes, and Charlotte's Web. If there are enough great moments in the movie to assure us that Grant hasn't lost her writerly touch, there are also enough clumsy ones to remind us that this is her directorial debut. Grant has revealed that the first cut of the movie was almost 3 hours long. Clearly it needed to be editedeven at 115 minutes it feels a tad lengthybut it's hard not to wonder if some of the wrong moments were left on the cutting room floor.
Characters evolve too quicklysometimes off camerafor us to keep up. The film relies too heavily on awkward coincidences (why does everyone keep running into each other in this film?) and, toward the end, forces tidy resolutions onto messy story lines. There are several false endings, robbing the final acts of their emotional payoff. And, like so many other Hollywood films, physical intimacy is used as shorthand for emotional intimacy, over-simplifying relationships and complicating ethics. Perhaps this is an accurate reflection of the way sex is used in many real-world relationships, but it would be nice to see a portrayal of love developed another way.
Nonetheless, Catch and Release has at least two laugh-out-loud moments, one decent plot surprise, and a romance that mostly makes up for its questionable timing with the winsomeness of its participants. It insists on an optimism about peopletheir ability to grow and change, and to bear a certain nobility even when deeply flawedthat is kind of refreshing. Even if it doesn't always make sense, it leaves you feeling pretty good.