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Blow Dry Movie Review

Blow Dry Review

HAIR & DISPAIR

Clichés, forced quirkiness, maudlin subplot outpace laughs in coiffeur comedy 'Blow Dry'

A scene from 'Blow Dry'

"BLOW DRY" Overview

** stars

"Blow Dry" is a leaden British dramedy about an estranged family of hairdressers reconciling when a big coiffeur competition comes to their small town. Like "The Big Tease" -- a similarly themed English mockumentary that came out last year, delaying the release of this one -- its laughs come mostly from tired flamboyancy stereotypes.

Hairdressers with over-styled, out-of-date dos and David Copperfield-like showmanship bite each other's backs to win what is apparently a prestigious award for clever and speedy hair cutting. Meanwhile a sad-sack local barber (Alan Rickman) enters the competition with his son (Josh Hartnett, "The Virgin Suicides") to face down his former salon partner (Bill Nighy), now the nation's star hairdresser and the dirty-tricking front-runner in the contest.

Besides suffering from the same problems "The Big Tease" had -- basically that it's a cliché-riddled underdog sports movie with a dye job and a limp wrist -- "Blow Dry" is also saddled with a maudlin, comedy-antidote subplot about Rickman's estranged lesbian ex-wife (Natasha Richardson), who is bravely dying of cancer 10 years after leaving him for his hair model (a criminally under-used Rachel Griffiths). Brought together again by the competition, everybody gets busy forgiving.

Some of the film's good laughs stem from the fact that Hartnett (doing a surprising spot-on English accent) styles hair for the local funeral home. Trying to romance the daughter (Rachel Leigh Cook) of the cheating big shot -- who apparently hasn't inherited her father's skills with scissors and dye -- Hartnett helps her practice her coloring technique on a few corpses.

But despite good (if overly earnest) performances by a talented cast, for every witticism in the picture there's at least one lame stereotype, at least one forced attempt to showcase the adorably quirky townsfolk and at least one unnecessarily somber moment that makes "Blow Dry" feel like some kind of vague message movie.

Some draft of the screenplay was written by Simon Beaufoy of "Full Monty" fame, but how much he's to blame is unclear. His cryptic credit reads "Based on the screenplay 'Never Better' by Simon Beaufoy" -- the vagueness of which is, by itself, pretty telling.




Review (c) Rob Blackwelder


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Cathy Hoosier Click for more info ( 2)

posted on 13/11/2006 05:01


comments:

I DON'T UNDERSTAND ALL THE FUSS ABOUT BLOW DRY. IT WAS PURE ENTERTAINMENT AND THAT'S ALL IT WAS MEANT TO BE. DON'T GET CAUGHT UP IN HOW AUTHENTIC THE ACCENTS ARE...PAY ATTENTION TO WHAT IS SAID. PAY ATTENTION TO THE STORY LINE. WHICH I THOUGHT WAS GOOD. THE STORY WAS MEANT TO MAKE YOU THINK A LITTLE ABOUT RELATIONSHIPS. PAST LOVES AND NEW ONES. CH




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lionwite Click for more info (1)

posted on 25/05/2008 07:44


comments:

Chris Null lives up or down to his name - when a critic cannot even tell that one of the top billed characters is playing a yank and not a brit, he obviously needs to concentrate on the job at hand, that is, criticize positively and put his cell phone in "call you back" mode. Obviously, something else distracted our intrepid reviewer and he phoned in this review - if you worked for my paper, it'd be "send the sod to cover the garbagemen's strike". This is a delightful comedy with a good cast - even Josh Hartnett, who I usually find wooden in his delivery, manages to bring a "gosh, gee whiz" youthful quality to Brian character despite the uneven accent, although I must say that I spotted a Yorkshire accent at the film's beginning. Between Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Rachael Griffiths and Bill Nighy we have an excellent crew to get this peek at the goings on at the Hairdressers competitions. Had this movie been made in the US, I would probably have passed on it but when I saw the actors involved, my curiosity was piqued and I'm glad I watched it. Warren Clarke does a great turn as the lord mayor of the town who morphs into the consumate emcee by the close of the competition. I also loved the small very supportive role that Rosemary Harris has as Daisy,- way to go Aunt May. The blend of comedy and emotional drama with one of them dying of cancer lent a poignant edge to the tale. Well luv, tirah and enjoy! Lots of laughs and a few tears.





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