Genre: Drama/Comedy
Director: Diane English
Cast: Meg Ryan,
Annette Bening,
Eva Mendes,
Debra Messing,
Jada Pinkett Smith, Carrie Fisher,
Cloris Leachman,
Debi Mazar,
India Ennenga,
Jill Flint,
Ana Gasteyer,
Joanna Gleason,
Tilly Scott Pedersen,
Lynn Whitfield,
with
Bette Midler
and
Candice Bergen
RunTime: 1 hr 54 mins
Released By: InnoForm Media & GV
Rating: NC-16 (Some Sexual References)
Official Website: http://www.thewomenthemovie.com
Opening Day: 8 January 2009
Synopsis:
"The
Women" tells the story of Mary Haines (Meg Ryan), a clothing
designer who seems to have it all – a beautiful country
home, a rich financier husband, an adorable 11-year-old daughter
and a part-time career creating designs for her father's venerable
clothing company. Her best friend, Sylvie Fowler (Annette
Bening), leads another enviable life – a happily single
editor of a prominent fashion magazine, a possessor of a huge
closet of designer clothes and a revered arbiter of taste
and style poised on New York's cutting edge. But when Mary's
husband enters into an affair with Crystal Allen (Eva Mendes),
a sultry 'spritzer girl' lurking behind the Saks Fifth Avenue
perfume counter, all hell breaks loose. Mary and Sylvie's
relationship is tested to the breaking point while their tight-knit
circle of friends, including mega-mommy Edie Cohen (Debra
Messing) and author Alex Fisher (Jada Pinkett-Smith), all
start to question their own friendships and romantic relationships
as well.
Movie Review:
The Women was a 1939 George Cukor classic acclaimed as sharp
social commentary about the pampered lives of various Manhattan
socialites. But to appreciate this contemporary version set
similarly in New York, it’s best to set aside any expectations
you may have from the original.
Instead,
this update by the creator of the Emmy-award winning series
Murphy Brown is clearly more heavily influenced by a certain
successful TV series (and most recently movie spinoff) about
the lives and loves of a particular group of friends. It’s
not hard to draw such comparisons- four being the magic number
here as well. Yes, I’m referring to Sex and the City-
but with less comedy and more drama.
The
Carrie Bradshaw of this story is a particular Mary Haines
(Meg Ryan) who appears to be living a perfect life- a beautiful
country home, a wealthy financier husband and a cute 11-year
old daughter- until she finds out that her husband has been
cheating on her with a salesgirl that sells perfume at Saks
Fifth Avenue (the “spritzer girl” as what the
adulterer is commonly referred as).
And
just as best friends are supposed to, the rest of the quartet
waste no time in rallying around Mary. There’s Sylvie
Fowler (Annette Bening), an editor of a prominent women’s
(what else?) fashion magazine; Edie Cohen (Debra Messing),
a mother of four who’s on her way to having her fifth;
and Alex Fisher (Jada Pinkett Smith), a lesbian author still
searching for Miss Right.
Mary’s
trio of friends will even confront “Spritzer Girl”
Crystal Allen (Eva Mendes doing her sultry best) in an attempt
to help Mary save her marriage. Not so however Mary’s
unfaithful husband who never makes an appearance in the movie.
In keeping with the spirit of the original, writer-director
Diane English keeps her cast all-female so the males in the
story are only joked about or sniped at, but never seen around.
Like its tagline suggests, it’s all about the women.
Well,
actually not really. It’s more about just two women,
Mary and Sylvie. The rest of the women are ostensibly sideshows
to make up the numbers, and that includes Edie and Alex. Sadly,
Diane English plays safe by creating two wholly familiar characters
in Mary and Sylvie- Mary learns from her husband’s betrayal
to start asking herself what exactly it is she wants for herself
in her life and Sylvie the status-hungry career woman discovers
how to stop making compromises she will regret later on just
to get ahead in her career.
Indeed,
unlike its much bolder predecessor, the women here are caricatures
which function as poor fodder for the film’s observation
of class struggle among the rich New York socialite women
and the lower divisions (as exemplified by “Spritzer
Girl”). Not that the star studded cast do not try. Meg
Ryan and Annette Bening are fine actresses and they bring
much panache to the flagging material. Unfortunately, they
are let down by the story’s many contrivances.
Pity
then that what could be a sharp contemporary update on a groundbreaking
classic of its time ends up being just tame. It is also paler
as a Sex and the City peer because what it possesses in sleekness,
it lacks in wit and empathy for its characters. The disappointment
is even greater; knowing that rarely has such an A-list cast
has been wasted on such an ineffectual cause.
Movie Rating:
(It’s not about The Women...It’s really much ado
about nothing)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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