Just Married Movie Review
Just Married Review

"Just Married" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Shawn LevyProducer : Robert Simonds
Screenwiter : Sam Harper
Starring : Ashton Kutcher,Brittany Murphy,Christian Kane,Taran Killam,Monet Mazur
Since I’m getting married this spring, I figured Just Married would be a funny
diversion from all of the wedding planning and decisions my fiancé and I are
making these days. Much to my surprise, this mean-spirited film scared me more
than it entertained. I hope married life isn’t anything like the bit of hell
portrayed in Just Married.
Ashton Kutcher (TV’s That '70s Show) plays Tom Leezak, a quirky late-night
radio traffic reporter who has little to show for his life, except for the
beautiful woman who has recently and inexplicably become his wife. She is
Sarah McNerney (Brittany Murphy), a young free spirit and daughter of one of
Beverly Hills’ richest tycoons. Their marriage meets with great opposition
from her snobbish family, especially from her father who wishes she had married
her old flame and refined family friend, Peter Prentis (Christian Kane). For
their honeymoon, Tom and Sarah take an expensive vacation to visit the great
capitals of Europe. Unfortunately, their vacation follows a downward spiral
that finds the two newlyweds fighting at every moment and looking nothing like
the happily-ever-after couple they should be.
Like Tom and Sarah’s doomed honeymoon, Just Married is a hopeless failure from
its first few frames. We don’t even know the characters’ names and we’re
already being told the film’s central conflict. What follows is one long
flashback scene where nothing we see surprises us because we now expect certain
things to happen. Because we already know the outcome, Married becomes an
exhaustive waiting game for the obligatory happy ending. Despite an occasional
chuckle at Kutcher’s expense and Murphy’s inherent cuteness, Married is just a
boorish mess.
Director Shawn Levy achieved a small success directing young stars Frankie
Muniz and Amanda Bynes in last year’s Big Fat Liar. In Liar, Muniz and Bynes
use numerous silly pranks and stunts to garner laughs from its pre-pubescent
audience. Married is really just another version of Liar, but for the
adolescent crowd. Levy successfully directs Kutcher and Murphy’s childish
quarrels, but he fails to give them much depth beyond that. Their relationship
is too elementary to engage, and Levy wastes too much time choreographing
arguments to take full advantage of the beautiful European locales.
Kutcher and Murphy (who are a couple in real life) are two attractive, likeable
actors with great potential, but their skills are wasted here. There is no
opportunity for them to develop any kind of chemistry because they fight for
the entire movie. After the first few quarrels, the novelty wears thin. In
fact, I’d say they never took the material seriously. Murphy makes that clear
during several of their heated arguments where she breaks a wry smile,
appearing to be just on the edge of laughter.
I’m glad she had fun making the film. On the other hand, I had little fun
watching it.
Try it on. It's good for another half a star.
Reviewer: David Levine





