Committed Movie Review
Committed Review

"Committed" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Lisa KruegerProducer : Marlen Hecht,Dean Silvers
Screenwiter : Lisa Krueger
Starring Heather Graham, Casey Affleck, Luke Wilson, Goran Visnjic, Patricia Velasquez, Alfonso Arau, Mark Ruffalo, Kim Dickens, Clea Duvall, Jon Stewart, Art Alexakis
I walked into the screening of Committed with low expectations, having acquired
some taste for Heather Graham though her appearances in Drugstore Cowboy,
Swingers, Boogie Nights, and, perhaps most notably, Austin Powers: The Spy Who
Shagged Me, but bearing little hope for a good story. After all, even Miramax’s
promotional synopses gave this picture about an over-zealous love junkie a
lackluster pitch. The lesson here: Sometimes bad salesmen pitch good widgets.
As Forrest Gump might put it, Heather Graham is as Heather Graham does. In this
flick, she does pretty good. Backed by the furrowed brow malaise of Luke Wilson
(Home Fries, Dog Park and one of the best episodes of The X Files) and the
way-cooler-than-his-brother Casey Affleck (200 Cigarettes), Graham’s wide-eyed
charm is disarming and convincing. You’ll also find some great supporting
performances from Patricia Velasquez (The Mummy—Don’t worry; she’s much wittier
here.) and Alfonso Arau (Like Water for Chocolate, A Walk in the Clouds and—my
favorite—El Guapo from The Three Amigos). The premise of the story is lame at
best, but the combination of on-screen talent and resourceful writing and
directing manage to pull off a better-than-mediocre movie. Committed is a
perfect date movie, and I suspect it’ll also be a winner among women whose men
are too dumb to stay put.
Graham plays Joline, a newlywed who is, as the title points out, committed to
her marriage beyond all reason. She’s not just into marriage, but honesty in
general, and the film’s first postulate is that that makes her unique. Whether
you buy this or not is irrelevant because once her husband (Carl, played by
Wilson) walks out the door, she’s off like a flash (after a brief cameo from
Everclear lead singer Art Alexakis) to Texas, led by a random smattering of
homegrown witchcraft. Lending some credence to the validity of her practices,
she does happen upon Carl near the Mexican border, leading to some of the most
heartwarmingly cheesy I-know-you-need-your-freedom-but-I’m-here-for-you dialog
ever written for the screen.
Writer/Director Lisa Krueger has pulled off a charming, funny script and
brought it to film against all odds. This is a film that shouldn’t be good, but
somehow is, and I advise all you young lovers out there to grab yourselves some
tickets and see it.
For those of you looking for comedic weirdness Graham showed in Austin Powers,
look elsewhere. And forget about the sex; it’s only hinted at here.
Committed and all wet.
Reviewer: Robert Strohmeyer





