I Could Never Be Your Woman Movie Review
I Could Never Be Your Woman Review
"I Could Never Be Your Woman" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Amy HeckerlingProducer : Cerise Hallam Larkin,Alan Latham,Philippe Martinez
Screenwiter : Amy Heckerling
Starring : Michelle Pfeiffer,Paul Rudd,Saoirse Ronan,Stacey Dash,Jon Lovitz,Tracey Ullman
Rosie (Michelle Pfeiffer), the lead character in Amy Heckerling's I Could Never Be
Your Woman, is believably beleaguered in a manner not often seen in a Hollywood romantic
comedy, where a typical dilemma has an attractive young woman torn between a hot
jerk and an ideal husband. Rosie is a single mother in her 40s, working her ass off
on a youth-culture sitcom and fighting against the prevailing notion that women in the
entertainment industry must approach but never touch the age of 28. Of course, she's
also clearly loaded, providing a privileged life for her tweenage daughter Izzie
(Saoirse Ronan); it's still a movie, after all.
The circumstances of Heckerling's clearly autobiographical film (she worked on the
TV version of Clueless for several years following that film's release, which she
also directed) mirrors its character's mix of luxury and messiness: It's a feature
film with a decent budget and several recognizable stars that got caught up in a
distribution mess and wound up proceeding straight to DVD. The movie itself is a
bit of a mess, too, with weird interludes where Tracey Ullman, playing Mother Nature(!),
harangues Rosie about the unstoppable march of time. Heckerling is fond of this technique;
as the screenwriter-director, she pauses the movie for diatribes of her own about the destructive nature
of beauty standards, the absurdity of network executives and standards and practices
monitors, and the insanity of reality TV -- topics that seem to have been festering
for a good decade or so.
But two of the movie's threads showcase the witty writing and way with actors Heckerling
demonstrates in her best work (namely Clueless). The scenes between Rosie and Izzie
are surprisingly insightful as they show a glamorous (but aging) L.A. mom trying
to shield her daughter from the superficial worst of her environment. Ronan fits
into that treacherous tween age with a perfect mixture of burgeoning awareness and
lingering childish innocence; she figures out how to play an intelligent child without
tipping into movieland precociousness.
The movie's purported story, sometimes obscured by the bustling feminist traffic,
is Pfeiffer's romance with Paul Rudd, a thirtysomething actor playing a twentysomething
actor playing a teenager on television. Their relationship could use more breathing
room, but they make an endearingly tenuous couple, with her conflicted, angry wit
and his carefree goofiness; how refreshing that they both get to be the funny, odd
one (though Rudd might pull ahead based on his unabashed dance-floor spasms). Too
bad you have to cringe a little, watching their courtship get jostled through a whole
lot of side business about TV, parenting, and nature.
Maybe that's the point. Sometimes you come across an interesting movie with too many
flaws to recommend, but Woman is a flawed movie with too much good stuff to completely
ignore. It's smart and warm, and if Heckerling loses her grip a few times, it's only
because she's squeezing so hard.
Well, you could if you tried really hard.
Reviewer: Jesse Hassenger





