Then She Found Me (2007)
Director: Helen Hunt
Movie review
From Time Out New York
An arranged marriage between a typical rom-com and what The New Yorker’s David Denby recently dubbed “the cinema of observation” (think Noah Baumbach, The Savages), Helen Hunt’s directorial debut wages war on two anatomical fronts: your pitter-pattering heart and her alter ego’s raw nerve endings. Hunt’s character, April, is a schoolteacher in full crisis mode, thanks to the departure of her husband (Broderick), the sudden appearance of her narcissistic long-lost mom (Midler) and the conspicuous lack of a bun in her 39-year-old oven. Naturally, this is also the exact moment that Mr. Right (Firth) shows up. (Firth’s single-father hunk is confirmed as “the one” when those tepid MOR tunes start playing over late-night phone chats.) Then the schizoid sensibility starts: Uncomfortable moments and near–nervous breakdowns transition into Oxygen-channel cuteness, which we’re supposed to read as some sort of approximation of…messy real life? Not quite.
At least this dramedy can’t be considered a vanity project, since the most distinguishing thing about Hunt’s movie is her total lack of vanity: She films herself in the least flattering way possible, albeit for maximum sympathy. Still, the movie’s aggressively middlebrow ideology is enough to make you utter the unspeakable: Come back, Nora Ephron. All is forgiven.
Author: David Fear
Time Out New York Issue 656: April 24 –30, 2008
User reviews of this film
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- Elaine said...
- Posted on Jun 27 2008 08:45 A fine directorial debut for Helen Hunt... if only the dialogue and plot line were not so disappointing. In small doses, contrivances can make a story more interesting, but here Helen has us suspending disbelief on too many levels at once. I found myself groaning at the fact that Mr. Perfect: attractive, available, harmlessly neurotic (and most important - interested in her), has impeccable timing as well, showing up on the very day she would most need to be found. Then She Found Me does redeem itself in the end, however, when Helen's character, April, finally speaks from the heart. I gave this film an extra star because in that climactic scene, she eloquently reveals the truth about all close relationships, not just those that are romantic in nature.
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Cast & crew
Director: Helen Hunt
Cast: Helen Hunt, Colin Firth, Matthew Broderick, Bette Midler, Lynn Cohen, Ben Shenkman, Salman Rushdie full cast
Rated: R
Duration: 100 mins
US Release: Apr 25 2008
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