Starring: Ginnifer Goodwin, Justin Long, Jennifer Connelly, Bradley Cooper, Scarlett Johansson, Jennifer Aniston, Ben Affleck, Drew BarrymoreDirector: Ken Kwapis
Rating: C+
"All my friends used to tell me about how things might work out with these dipsticks because they knew someone, who knew someone, who dated a dipstick just like mine. That girl ended up getting married and living happily ever after. That's the exception and we're not the exception we're the rule. "
It's difficult enough translating a best-selling fiction novel into a movie - having to compete with the readers' imaginations and potentially skimping on the author's details. What more if the movie is a translation of a non-fiction self-help book?
Such is the dilemma of He's Not That Into You - an interpretation of Greg Behrendt and Liz Tuccillo's best-selling book for women that get trampled on in the dating game when they make excuses for the jerks they chase after. The general message: men go for what they want, period. Stop adding in the shades of gray, it really is that simple. If he's not all over you, it means he doesn't want to be. The book is empowering and liberating to those who fall into this trap, possibly obvious and silly to the more well adjusted sorts. I'm more from the former category than the latter, so I was very, very curious how these simple yet powerful ideas would translate into script. An allegory of the pitfalls of modern love? A very intriguing possibility...
First, some introductions.
Gigi - she is you, she is the girl that needs to read the book, she is the girl waiting by her phone, she is the girl that soothes herself with excuses when the phone does not ring, she is... desperate to the point of alienation and irritation. I'm not sure single girls will appreciate having Gigi as their representative - for the most part, I didn't.
Alex - he is the voice of the book, the voice of reason at the sidelines of Gigi's desperate debacles telling her how not into her all these guys are. Problem is, he doesn't fit into the story. He's the narrator that is hanging out with the characters instead of being the all-knowing voice-over. He's saying the same thing, repetitive and contrived. He's not like anyone you'd ever meet, he's not believable - he might as well be 3 inches tall and sitting on Gigi's shoulder.
Unfortunately, Gigi and Alex are the crux of the film, the most important players, and they don't fare so well.
It's not all bad. Around Gigi and Alex is a network of other relationships that are delicately, tragically intertwined. Through several characters, some very poignant issues in modern relationships are explored: the marriage/commitment distinction, marriage breakdown, infidelity, technological impacts on social interaction, the pressure of loneliness (and the following insanity), unrequited love and the fact that girls can be jerks, too - they're not always the victims of the piece.
In fact, there are some absolute gems in this movie - lines, scenes, snippets that either had me laughing out loud, or stopping short of laughing out loud because it hit a little too close to home. Mary (Drew Barrymore) provides a great commentary on the numerous technological outputs you can get rejected on and I was in hysterics over the women who mused about how they had been tricked into thinking they were breaking up with guys when really, they were the ones being dumped!
He's Just Not That Into You falls over when trying to 'tie up' all these complex issues at the end. Although the crew make a very deliberate attempt to stop people from dismissing the film as a typical romantic comedy (Watch their piss-take on rom-com cliches that are not in the film here: click on the candy heart that reads Top Ten Chick Flick Cliches - pretty funny, actually), there is no distinction between formulaic (what they try to avoid) and predictable (what the story inevitably becomes). What I found most outrageous was Alex's assertion at the end that Gigi is indeed the exception and not the rule, completely betraying the book and everything it stands for!
Perhaps translating a manifesto into a story is too ambitious for even the best of film-makers. Perhaps these issues are better explored in a series rather than crammed into the confines of a romantic comedy. There's enough in He's Just Not That Into You to be engaging, funny and even insightful. But the unlucky in love will have to look for answers elsewhere...


