Management Movie Review
Management Review

"Management" Overview

Rating: 15
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Stephen BelberProducer : Marty Bowen, Wyck Godfrey, Sidney Kimmel
Screenwiter : Stephen Belber
Starring : Steve Zahn,Jennifer Aniston,Woody Harrelson,Fred Ward,Margo Martindale,James Liao,Mark Boone Jr,Tzi Ma
Gentle and very sweet, this low-key romance takes some rather random turns as
it drifts toward the obvious conclusion. But it's very nicely played, and it
still manages to catch us emotionally.
Mike (Zahn) is a lonely man-child, living in the Arizona hotel owned by his
parents (Ward and Martindale). When he spots travelling businesswoman Sue
(Aniston) checking in, he invents a reason to talk to her. And even she is
surprised by her response to his clumsy advances. But it turns out that she's
also lonely, trying to sort out her place in the world and looking for security
Mike probably can't offer. On the other hand, is her high-achieving boyfriend
(Harrelson) the right choice?
This is one of those quirky independent films that takes several
credibility-stretching turns as it shifts from comedy to drama to romance,
stirring in all kinds of events and issues and winning us over with sheer
charm. Not everything works, and some of the episodes feel jarringly out of
place, but they're held together by a refreshing sense of irony and a deeply
affecting tenderness.
Essentially, it's the story of a man's coming of age, and Zahn is very likeable
even when he does some creepy things. We never understand why he's so painfully
awkward, and his transition from clueless to confident is fairly contrived, but
his personal odyssey still resonates. Opposite him, Aniston gives a terrific
turn as a sarcastic woman who has no reason to be as insecure as she is. Ward
and Martindale do the most with their smallish roles, while Liao provides a
blast of comic relief as Mike's oddball friend. And Harrelson is hilariously
earnest as the yogurt magnate.
The film has an inventive structure, with scenes that echo each other and a
plot that literally criss-crosses to three geographical extremes, from Arizona
to Maryland to Washington State. And for every moment of over-the-top nuttiness
(such as the wacky parachute sequence) there's a witty line of dialog ("You're
incredibly sweet beneath the part of you that's not") that catches us off
guard. And like Mike, writer-director Belber wears us down with the cinematic
equivalent of big puppy dog eyes; the film's so relentlessly cute that we just
can't hate it.
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Review by Rich Cline
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