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Is this a commercial for the National Tourism Council of Ireland or for the conditioner Amy Adams uses in her hair? Either way, both look fabulous. Then there's the movie, a soggy affair directed with no great enthusiasm by Anand Tucker. Leap Year draws its dubious premise from a supposed Irish custom in which women may propose to their reluctant boyfriends February 29. The woman is Anna (Adams), a Boston apartment stager, and her intended fiancé, Jeremy (Adam Scott), is a surgeon more in love with his BlackBerry than her. They've found the perfect co-op and they look perfect together, yet after four years, he just won't pull the Tiffany trigger. What's a girl to do?
The surgeon has flown to a medical conference in Dublin, which neatly coincides with leap day, so Anna packs her wheeled Louis Vuitton luggage to ambush him on the fated date. Needless to say, things don't go as planned.
Leap Year belongs to the strange subgenre of women's pictures in which smart, stylish women must be muddied, abased, ridiculed, and degraded in order to get their man. (Having earned some $163 million, The Proposal guarantees that more will surely follow.) It's the Prada backlash, a comeuppance to have-it-all feminism. That Adams's romantic ordeal takes her to Ireland means she'll be tested with: (1) mud, (2) rain, (3) manure, and (4) Matthew Goode, as the oafish innkeeper near the beach where she washes ashore. Anna has two days to reach Dublin to propose! Who will drive her there (and drive her crazy along the way)? You can write Leap Year's opposites-attract itinerary yourself.
Goode embraces his grinningly cretinous role without hesitation. His Declan is a thousand vulgar miles removed from Colin Firth's clean-cut boyfriend in A Single Man, a lowbrow retort to his posh breakthrough roles in Match Point and Brideshead Revisited. But, absent a good script, there's only so much that chin stubble and talking with a mouthful of food can accomplish. Thanks to co-writers Harry Elfont and Deborah Kaplan (Made of Honor), Declan is more a collection of tics and hurts than a real character. (Upon arrival, Anna immediately uncovers a photo hinting at past heartbreak; he's a man in need of healing, a project like the apartments she prepares for sale.)
Nor can Adams's considerable reservoir of goodwill (Junebug, Enchanted, etc.) bring depth to stereotype. Manless, desperate, and forever in heels, she teeters through the picture like a manicured nail waiting to break. Cow pies, brogue, and catastrophe are drawn to her, yet, like Sandra Bullock in The Proposal, she remains a trooper, besmirched but smiling through every indignity. In one long pratfall, she destroys a hotel room while attempting to charge her failing cell phone; she is Carrie Bradshaw stuck amid the Three Stooges. That our heroine comes across as a control freak is attributed to her charming, irresponsible father (five minutes of John Lithgow is quite enough), who set a pattern of men to avoid. Men like Declan. Sigh.
Only in its calmer, domestic interludes — cooking, sleeping, chicken-neck-wringing — does Leap Year treat its stars generously. Tucker (Shopgirl) has no feel for the momentum necessary in a road-trip movie where, at its midpoint, he stages the least convincing bar fight in screen history. Though, in fairness, Goode is hardly a convincing brawler; he's far too goofy to be a Clark Gable-style scoundrel, as the script would seem to require.
In more ways than one, the Elfont-Kaplan screenplay rehashes 1930s Hollywood convention, hoping to be It Happened One Night in Ireland. (Oh, no! There's only one bed left at the B&B!) The PG rating and absence of real sexual desire are curiously retrograde, as if the picture were designed for that huge mother-daughter matinee market, ahem. (Trust me: Your mom would rather see It's Complicated, a greatly superior rom-com that offers women pleasure, not humiliation.) But back during the '30s, Claudette Colbert and Rosalind Russell were allowed to be clever, capable, and competent. The term women's picture wasn't a putdown.
Though, honestly, Leap Year is too mediocre to be taken as an insult. It just registers as cheap imitation — a plastic shamrock of a movie.
Mr. Miller�s laziness is shown with his comments �dubious premise from a supposed Irish custom.� It is easy to find the answer on the Internet and his indecisiveness is not necessary. Also there is this amazing bit of Miller�s PC thinking, �Leap Year belongs to the strange subgenre of women's pictures in which smart, stylish women must be muddied, abased, ridiculed, and degraded in order to get their man.� The possibility Miller has no sense of humor occurs to me. Then comes a basic misunderstanding of Matthew Goodes character describing him as �Goode embraces his grinningly cretinous role without hesitation.� How Declan got his attitude is shown very clearly and the relation to cretin is close to invisible. He is changed some by his exposure to Anna as she is by her exposure to him. They are both people. People are sometimes imperfect. Miller need not over react to life. �He is a man in need of healing.� There you go Miller. You might actually get it! Mr, Miller then makes this mistake. �Nor can Adams's considerable reservoir of goodwill (Junebug, Enchanted, etc.) bring depth to stereotype.� The flawed but not entirely failed writing is overcome easily by Amy Adams acting ability and projected charm. Portraying a character ranging from several versions of very happy all the way to considering suicide reflects depth very easily and avoids stereotype. Mr. Goode projects a very strong and capable fighter. When that was needed Goode did it very well and these words of Miller seem silly to me, �Though, in fairness, Goode is hardly a convincing brawler;.� The fight was staged poorly. The following quote reflects more about Miller than the movie: �The PG rating and absence of real sexual desire are curiously retrograde,� I believe Mr. Miller thinks deeper things than sex are not important in romance. More than anything else this explains his negative view of this movie and perhaps of life. Miller suggests Leap Year offers women not pleasure but humiliation. What movie did he see? Any Adams character was put in some comedic situations. She handled them in various ways and dealt with them strongly in most cases. She did not let it get her down but bounced back and kept going. In several scenes she felt for Declan and tried to help him. She eventually fell in love with him and the strengths and weaknesses of both characters were shown. The writers made Declan do something horrible to her near the end of the picture. No one would be that stupid and Matthew Goode and the picture were let down by poor writing. Amy Adams acting made the situation extremely dramatic and sad. �But back during the '30s, Claudette Colbert and Rosalind Russell were allowed to be clever, capable, and competent. The term women's picture wasn't a putdown.� This picture did not put down women. It showed one woman trying to deal with life and the changes that come along. Amy�s character showed all three of those characteristics. She was playing an imperfect person and not locked into predetermined reactions to things that came along. She was changing with the experiences that fell her way. �Though, honestly, Leap Year is too mediocre to be taken as an insult. It just registers as cheap imitation � a plastic shamrock of a movie.� Geez! Amy played a character that had a full range of experience during the movie from giddy happiness to near suicide. The role could not have been played any better and she demonstrated why she is a great actress and a beauty. Matthew Goode�s character was not consistently well written but he showed how to do as well as possible with imperfect writing. The acting was great and the story was acceptable. Originality is not in the story but in the rest. Finally the setting was Irishly beautiful. Sorry Mr. Miller. I find your review shallow and mostly unseeing. Tom Gaumer
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