Genre:
Drama/Comedy
Director: Bart Freundlich
Cast: Julianne Moore, David Duchovny, Billy
Crudup, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Eva Mendes
RunTime: 1 hr 43 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: TBA
Official Website: http://www.foxsearchlight.com/trusttheman
Opening Day: 7 Dec 2006
Synopsis:
A comedy following the romantic escapades of two couples--a
successful actress and her stay at home husband and her slacker
younger brother and his aspiring novelist girlfriend--as they
search for love in the midst of careers, family, infidelity
and the ever-daunting search for Manhattan street parking.
Movie
Review:
A romantic dramedy set in New York, the tale follows the love
lives of two good-looking contemporary couples – married
duo Rebecca (Julianne Moore) and Tom (David Duchovny) who
have two kids together, and live-in couple Tobey (Billy Crudup),
who happens to be Rebecca’s younger brother, and Elaine
(Maggie Gyllenhall) who have dated for seven years. After
a series of cheating, lying, trials and separation, both men
realise that their lives with their significant other is a
lot more important and worthwhile to them than they thought
and desperately attempt to salvage their relationships before
it’s too late.
In
an attempt to be complex, the story uses convenient opposing
desires and characteristics for each couple, but fails to
give an appropriate/realistic explanation as to why they are
that way. Example, the girlfriend, Elaine wants to get married
and have kids, while Tobey, the overgrown teenager of a boyfriend
wants to stay single because he has an apparent fear of death
and thus, doesn’t want to participate in life’s
more important events and decisions. Not that it makes much
sense, but that is the angle they are trying to sell to audiences.
Same
goes for the married couple, Rebecca has lost her interest
in sex due to her busy career as a successful New York actress,
while Tom, her stay-at-home husband has become gradually more
fixated with it, probably due to all the free time he now
has. In an attempt to feed his desire, he begins turning to
porn and eventually an affair with an attractive single mother
he meets at his son’s daycare. What’s odd is that
the affair makes him realise that he is a sex addict and is
in need of treatment. Somehow, it just doesn’t seem
a believable plotline that not being able to have sex with
the wife and finding other outlets for it qualifies him as
being a sex addict.
This
movie had a couple of decent scenes and good laughs thrown
in, but there were also a lot of half-baked story telling
(that sometimes didn’t even have much to do with the
main plot) and recycled clichés about the meaning of
love in the big city that made this movie fall short. While
this movie was supposedly dubbed to be homage to Woody Allen’s
earlier films, the quality of this movie is obviously not
quite there.
As
the plot moves along, it becomes increasingly predictable
and it hits the climax with an exaggerated and unconvincing
finale that stretch a little too much and too long for it’s
own good. Although with that said, there is one thing that
has salvaged this movie, and that is the star-studded cast.
Considering the material they had on hand, they indeed have
put up a good effort to make this work. The main actors have
done great and notably; David Duchovny is most impressive
of the lot. Playing Tom, the stay-at-home dad. Here, he sheds
his tense Fox Moulder persona to replace it with a charming
sophistication and subtle wit for most of his scenes.
In
the end, Trust the Man makes for a watchable movie, but it
doesn’t exactly have any punches, impact or significant
message about the meaning of modern love for its audiences.
Movie Rating:
(Other than the terrific cast, there really isn’t
much else that this movie can offer audiences)
Review
by Jolene Tan
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