Broken English Movie Review
Broken English Review
"Broken English" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Zoe CassavetesProducer : Andrew Fierberg,David Atlan Jackson,Jason Kliot,Joana Vicente
Screenwiter : Zoe Cassavetes
Starring : Parker Posey,Melvil Poupaud,Drea DeMatteo,Justin Theroux,Gena Rowlands
Don't you just love Parker Posey? She's such an original talent, and it's
irksome to see her do so well in a film that just doesn't cut it. Broken
English plays like a tired retread of Sex and the City, with all the same
preoccupations and issues but with none of the fun. Posey gives it her best
shot, but she has little to work with.
Nora (Posey) is a thirty-something hotel concierge specializing in VIP guests,
but her life has little glamour. When not tending to the VIPs, she's home
drinking red wine, popping sleeping pills, and wondering why she can't find
just one nice man. A fifth-anniversary party for her best friend Audrey (Drea
DeMatteo) adds insult to injury, even as her own mom (Gena Rowlands, director
Zoe Cassavetes's mother) tries to cheer her up.
Nora is so vulnerable that street-smart though she is, she happily falls into
bed with a charismatic actor named Nick (Justin Theroux) who has checked into
the hotel. The morning after he's full of false promises, and she totally
believes him. Wow, she enthuses. I have a famous actor boyfriend. When all that
falls apart pretty much instantaneously, she's worse off than ever.
That's when Julien (Melvil Poupard) sweeps in. An impossibly and effortlessly
sexy Frenchman, he meets Nora at a party and is fascinated by her. But no
matter how cool, easygoing, and straightforward he is, Nora is not going to be
burned again, so she resists as long as she can. Even when she finally caves,
she knows that Julien must one day return to France, and what then? His answer,
"Come with me, bien sur." (It's just like Sex and the City!)
Nora doesn't leave New York right away, but eventually she and Audrey have a
Parisian adventure full and emotional ups and downs. Sad to say, the movie
crumbles in its final minutes when it leaves what has been its firm grounding
in reality and floats an absurd only-in-the-movies coincidence followed by a
happy ending that someone like, say, Carrie Bradshaw had to work a lot harder
to achieve. Any woman of a certain age who has sympathized with Nora all along
the way is sure to shout "baloney!" (or something similar) at the screen when
Broken English takes its abrupt final turn.
It's frustrating. Cassavetes starts off very much on the right track, and Posey
creates a real woman (although she certainly is movie-star thin) with real
problems. When the movie turns out to be so unreal, it feels like a gyp.
A pot pie by any other name.
Reviewer: Don Willmott





