Alfie Movie Review
Alfie Review

"Alfie" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Charles ShyerProducer : Sean Daniel,Diana Phillips
Screenwiter : Elaine Pope,Charles Shyer
Starring : Jude Law,Marisa Tomei,Omar Epps,Nia Long,Sienna Miller,Susan Sarandon
With his insatiable appetite for the opposite sex, his cockney British chirp
and his healthy confidence in his own good looks, Jude Law’s modern-day Romeo
romping through Alfie is a smoother-talking Austin Powers without the
adolescent giggles.
How much is too much when it comes to Law? Before the female readers answer,
consider this: The handsome Brit has his well-manicured hands in three current
projects and will release three more films between now and year’s end. Needless
to say, your tolerance for Law’s antics will determine how much you’ll enjoy
Alfie. Director Charles Shyer’s mixed bag of tricks includes a continuous
conversation through the imaginary fourth wall and a camera lens that’s
terrified to let Law wander too far out of frame.
This updated Alfie remakes a 1966 Best Picture nominee that starred Michael
Caine as a womanizer learning a thing or two about his life and the ladies he
lets into it. Law is a perfectly capable replacement. We certainly understand
why women of all shapes, sizes, and colors would flock to this charmer. And the
pearls of wisdom dispensed by this charming cad sound similar to this: “Never
get involved with a single mum. They come with accessories.”
But as “Gigolo Joe” starts working his way through a checklist of troubles,
from an inadvertent pregnancy to a medical scare, we eventually start laughing
at Alfie, not with him. The flawed and fragile girls Alfie ties in knots – from
longtime flame Julie (Marisa Tomei) to temporary temptress Nikki (Sienna
Miller) – turn out to be far more interesting case studies than he is.
Experimental at points yet wholly predictable, Alfie summarizes an entire
season of Sex and the City observations about mating and dating into one
decidedly dated package. Playwright Bill Naughton’s original piece, touched up
by screenwriter Elaine Pope, arrives at surface interpretations about the
single man. He gets lonely around the holidays. He’ll betray his best friend if
the girl is pretty enough and the alcohol is flowing. He has a business plan
but no desire to follow through on it. Raise your hand if any of this surprises
you.
What damages this obsolete Alfie more is the film’s limited message, which
primarily speaks to a dwindling community of urban lotharios and insatiable
insomniacs perusing singles bars in search of temporary companionship. In this
age of cyber-dating, I’m not sure whose fantasy life Alfie is living… except
for maybe Law’s.
The DVD offers unfathomably copious extras, including two commentary tracks,
deleted scenes, storyboards, featurettes, and much more.
"Let me tell you about the time I was on SNL with Ashlee Simpson..."
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





