In the sparkling comedy SOMETHING'S GOTTA GIVE directed by Nancy Meyers (WHAT WOMEN WANT), divorced, successful playwright Erica Barry (Diane Keaton) has given up on finding a fulfilling romantic relationship. When her beautiful young daughter Marin (Amanda Peet) visits the family's Hamptons home with her ageing, lothario .. Read more
| Starring | Jack Nicholson, Diane Keaton, Frances McDormand, Keanu Reeves |
|---|---|
| Director | Nancy Meyers |
| Genres | Comedy, Romance |
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In the sparkling comedy SOMETHING'S GOTTA GIVE directed by Nancy Meyers (WHAT WOMEN WANT), divorced, successful playwright Erica Barry (Diane Keaton) has given up on finding a fulfilling romantic relationship. When her beautiful young daughter Marin (Amanda Peet) visits the family's Hamptons home with her ageing, lothario boyfriend Harry Sanborn (Jack Nicholson), Erica's plight as a mature, single woman comes into stark focus. Harry exclusively dates young women, which infuriates Erica. Though initially they repel each other, things change when Harry has a heart attack and Erica comes to his aid. The two make peace and discover a smoldering attraction to one another. However, love never comes without complications. Harry still has a romantic obligation to Marin, and Erica gets a taste of Harry's lifestyle when the sexy young doctor Julian (Keanu Reeves) hits on her. Whether Erica and Harry can reconcile their differences provides the premise for an elegant, touching, and amusing tale. In their first movie together since REDS, Keaton and Nicholson share natural chemistry, each giving powerful and moving performances under Meyers' expert direction.
| Starring | Jack Nicholson, Diane Keaton, Frances McDormand, Keanu Reeves, Amanda Peet, Jon Favreau |
|---|---|
| Director | Nancy Meyers |
| Studio | WARNER HOME VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 2 hrs 3 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Collections | 100 Rom-Coms |
| Genres | Comedy, Romance |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Subtitles | DVD: Arabic, Danish, English, Finnish, Hebrew, Icelandic, Norwegian, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 10 Jun 2004 Production year: 2003 |
| Format | DVD |
Jack Nicholson and Diane Keaton show the young 'uns how it's done in this feel-good romantic comedy. Reuniting the stars for the first time since 1981's Reds, the film is a frothy portrayal of post-menopausal love from What Women Want director Nancy Meyers. In a role that combines sassy sophistication and emotionally flummoxed charm, Keaton shines as a divorced playwright who thinks affairs of the heart are a folly of youth, until she reluctantly nurses her daughter's ageing lover (Nicholson). Drawn to the arrogant bachelor, she's surprised to find a mutual attraction, despite his assertion he only dates women under 30. While wolfish Nicholson plays to type, it's still thoroughly enjoyable watching the duo interact. There's a life-affirming energy whenever they're on screen together, making the subplots — including Keaton's pursuit by young doctor Keanu Reeves — intrusive distractions. Though the feature drifts into sentimentality and there's scant substance beneath the heart-warming veneer, it's pleasing to see Hollywood fluff where passion has no age restriction.
Overlong romantic comedy that begins well, but soon goes sitcom soggy; Nicholson resorts to his most familiar mannerisms, while Keaton's over-emotional performance makes one wish that she'd act her age.
Playboy bachelor Harry Sanborn (Jack Nicholson) heads off for a dirty weekend with new squeeze Marin Barry (Amanda Peet) only for their private party at the family retreat to be crashed by Marin's mother, Erica (Diane Keaton). The stress proves too much for Harry, suffering a mild heart attack and advised to rest up in the Barry beach house under the watchful eye of Erica. The usual hijinks occur as the two initially hate each other, notice positive aspects in the other's character, fall in love, change for the better and all the usual clich?d tosh in a romantic comedy that makes few deviations from type. It's more successful in the comedy department than the romance, Nicholson's impeccable delivery balancing some strangely lifeless scenes that would still be enough to earn this an unreserved thumbs up if it'd didn't drag a deadweight half hour along at the tail end purely for a grotesquely cheesy happy ending. As it stands it outstays it's welcome and undoes some of the good favour it had built up, but there's still enough laughs present to be enjoyable for at least the majority of its runtime.
nice movie to just chill and watch nothing to complex or complicated would watch it again
Though not short of a bob or two, movie starlets Cameron Diaz and Kate Winslet are to rough it for a while and go backpacking in India. The stars of such films as Titanic, Enigma, Iris (Winslet) and There's Something About Mary, Shrek, and Vanilla Sky (Diaz) have not decided to pack it all in however, the trip is in aid of research for their new film Holiday. Directed by Nancy Meyer (Something's Gotta Give, The Parent Trap, Father Of The Bride) Holiday will be a romantic comedy in which Diaz... Read more