50 First Dates Movie Review
50 First Dates Review

"50 First Dates" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Peter SegalProducer : Jay Roach,Adam Sandler
Screenwiter : George Wing
Starring : Adam Sandler,Drew Barrymore,Dan Aykroyd,Sean Astin,Rob Schneider,Blake Clark
It’s like a Valentine’s Day present from Adam Sandler – if he hated us, each
and every one. There’s a funny man somewhere inside of Sandler, but he only
makes brief appearances on movie screens; and unfortunately he keeps making
comedies, even when he shouldn’t. The perfect example of a comedy that never
should have been, 50 First Dates provides pretty much nothing in the laughs
department but, just to be cruel, gives audiences a taste, but just a taste, of
the romantic story buried underneath all the caca jokes.
In the world of 50 First Dates, we’re supposed to believe that Sandler – whose
name this time out is Henry Roth, if it matters – is a veterinarian and ladies
man who only romances tourists due to his commitment phobia. When he’s not
loving and leaving, Henry is giving all the sordid details of said behavior to
his best buddy Ula (Rob Schneider sporting a tatty wig and accent that should
have the Hawaiian Anti-Defamation League in arms) and elicits cute reaction
shots from his animal patients and buddies, like some sort of evil Dr.
Doolittle. But then he meets adorable Lucy Whitmore (Drew Barrymore) at a café
and falls hard for her. They plan to meet the next day, but when he shows up,
she has no idea who the hell he is.
The concept here is that Lucy was in a car accident a year before, one of those
fortunate ones that don’t leave you with any icky scars but result in a
plot-friendly syndrome: She only remembers up to the day of the accident, her
short-term memory only lasts a day and so she wakes up every morning thinking
it’s the day of the accident. This presents problems for the guy who’s in love
with her, meaning that every day he has to show up at the café and convince her
to go out with him again. Henry also has to convince her dad and brother, who’
ve been keeping everything in her life as it was the morning of her accident,
to let him try and make Lucy remember things (or give her a videotape she can
watch every morning which explains everything that’s happened). It’s like
Memento meets Groundhog Day, but a love story, and in Hawaii – with vomiting
walruses (yes!).
There’s some fantastic potential here, which makes it all the more painful how
badly the film fails in almost every regard. First, the script takes a
ludicrous amount of time building up to when Lucy and Henry meet, filling the
space in between with sub-moronic humor, half of which doesn’t even make sense.
Then, even after the romance begins, 50 First Dates is like listening to a
child who’s desperate for attention and says “poop!” whenever there’s a lull in
conversation. In terms of supporting characters, besides the aforementioned Rob
Schneider minstrel act, there’s also Sean Astin as a lisping, weightlifting
‘roidhead and a brain-damaged guy named 10 Second Tom; will the laughs ever
stop?
It’s a true shame because the final scene is joyously romantic in a truly
unexpected fashion, sure to leave half the audience (even the ones who hated
most everything up until that point) smiling through their tears. But it’s just
too little far too late.
On DVD, a smorgasbord of extras await: deleted scenes, gag reel, commentary
track (from director Peter Segal and Barrymore) , and more absurdities await.
Aka Fifty First Dates.
Looking for love in all the wrong places.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





