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| Original Title |
Seven Girlfriends |
| Director |
Paul Lazarus |
| Genre |
Comedy, Romance |
| Released |
1999-11-6 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated R for sexuality and language. |
| Rated |
5.9 |
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| Jesse is charming, romantic, and he knows how to pop the question; he just can't face marriage. So, when he and Hannah split up during the same week that a former fiancée dies, he decides to figure things out. He visits each woman about whom he's been serious to ask what went wrong. His teen flame, an independent woman who sometimes sleeps with him, and a group of lesbians give him advice, as does Anabeth, dead but lively in his dreams. One ex remains furious, but with the help of her inventive colleague, the level-headed insomniac Laura, Jesse even gets to talk to her. It's on to Anabeth's funeral, where he'll see Hannah, and maybe grasp what has been eluding him. |
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| Laura Leighton as Anabeth , Timothy Daly as Jesse , Olivia d'Abo as Hannah (as Olivia D'Abo) , Neal Lerner as Manny , Arye Gross as Roman , Adilah Barnes as High School Secretary , Kathleen Freeman as Mrs. Hargrove , Lindsay Sloane as Daphne , Michael B. Silver as Tim (as Michael Buchman Silver) , Mimi Rogers as Marie , Katy Selverstone as Peri , Alan F. Smith as Petruchio , Stephanie Erb as Zoe , Jessica Hecht as Architect's Receptionist , Melora Hardin as Laura |
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Potentially hilarious screenplay sabotaged
"Seven Girlfriends", has many moments of potentially inspired comedy each of
which are dampened to the point of being merely ok by the TV-style direction
of Paul Lazaras. Oddly enough, Lazaras also had a hand in the very
screenplay he almost ruins with his mediocre direction (but before handing
out the Pulitzer, it should be noted that the basic plot of this film--an
immature man seeks out old girlfriends to find out why he is incapable of
maintaining a relationship--is very, very similar to Nick Hornby's 1996
novel "High Fidelity", itself recently made into a superior film by Steven
Frears).
In the hands of a director less hack-ified by his TV experience, and with a
more interesting lead player than the similarly TV-bland Timothy Daly, the
screenplay of "Seven GF's", as written, with its blend of heart-felt
sentiment and gross-out humor, could have been a big, big, "Something About
Mary" hit.
And before anyone who's a fan of this film jumps me for comparing the tame
final product "7GFs" became to a Farrely Brothers movie, lets not forget the
scene in "7GFs" where a character creams in his pants during a mild
good-night kiss. AND lets not forget how bland the director made the moment.
I mean, really--how do you make that kind of thing bland?!
SO, time to do a remake. Get the Farrelys (or at least a director who hasn't
been turned to mush by directing too many TV shows) and get a star who has
some kind of...I don't know...charisma, or talent, or sense of humor, or
light behind his eyes or something! I mean, nothing against Daly as an
actor--for TV he's fine. But he's not an interesting person to watch; he
gives a perfect reading of someone you would get bored with at a party. Give
us Ben Stiller, or John Cusack--somebody with a spark. Somebody who can make
us laugh, and think, and occasionally cringe with recognition.
At least when you see a really BAD movie made from a good screenplay, the
script gets buried--you can't really tell there was any potential. But when
you see a mediocre movie made out of a good screenplay, all you can think
about as you watch it is--"man, that SHOULD have been good!"
This one should have been good.
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