Music and Lyrics Movie Review
Music and Lyrics Review

"Music and Lyrics" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc LawrenceProducer : Marc Lawrence
Screenwiter : Marc Lawrence
Starring : Hugh Grant,Drew Barrymore,Kristin Johnston,Brad Garrett,Haley Bennett,Campbell Scott
It's not a complaint when I say that Hugh Grant seems to play the same role
over and over these days. It never gets old to watch him play a complete
bastard who is also loveable and endearing in his utter self-absorption. It may
eventually get tiresome to see the spiky-haired acerbic bloke woo the girl, but
it hasn't yet -- and it is certainly an improvement over his earlier,
sappy-and-awkward romantic stylings.
In Music and Lyrics, Grant's playing Alex Fletcher, former frontman of a
hilariously '80s band called Pop and current contented has-been. While living
exclusively in the land of former glory does allow Alex to wallow in adoration
without really having to do anything whatsoever, his bottom-of-the-barrel tour
dates are drying up and the money is running out. He gets the chance to revive
his career when a vapid pop superstar gives him four days to write her a hit
song.
Alex is lucky enough to have a novice lyricist as his fill-in plant tender, so
he and Sophie (Drew Barrymore) strike up an impromptu partnership to crank out
a twee pop ballad in under a week. It's a convenient set up for the odd couple
brand of foreplay so popular in chick flicks, with the flirty banter and clever
quipping, but most of the entertainment isn't from the awkwardness of first
love so much as it is about Barrymore's floopy, hippie appeal colliding with
Grant's sarcastic charm.
There is something about Music and Lyrics that seems rote, even for a prototype
in the romantic comedy field. It hits all the appropriate rises and falls of a
burgeoning onscreen romance -- the meet cute, the sudden discovery of deep
feelings, the obstacles that threaten to tear the lovers apart -- and it hits
them precisely when convention dictates. But it does so even though Barrymore
and Grant have a more bickering sibling or flirtatious friends vibe than they
do, even though their romance has no real roadblocks to it, even though it
feels like these things happen because they are supposed to happen in romantic
comedies.
But Music and Lyrics is much more comedy than romance. It's funny because of
Alex's unflagging wittiness, and the tragically accurate satire of a rich pop
star's enthusiasm for both Hunduism and onstage dry humping he calls "dancing."
Kristin Johnston is also a delight as Sophie's sister, a weight-loss guru with
a huge residual crush on Alex's patented Pop dance moves. It's accidentally
funny because of the bargain basement dubbing in of singing voices for all the
actors (which has happened to Barrymore before, in Everyone Says I Love You).
But the absolute top tier of comedy is the opening scene of Pop's original 1984
hit, "Pop Goes My Heart," which is spectacularly Wham-tastic.
It's too bad that Music and Lyrics isn't better, because it's been ages since
there was a really good romantic comedy, and this one looks adorable on paper.
But writer-director Marc Lawrence, who previously did Two Weeks Notice, may
know how to write Hugh Grant to be flawlessly endearing, but he does not seem
to have the same knack for pacing an entire romance. It's got all the polish
and pizzazz of an entertaining movie, but it really feels too chicky for a good
comedy, yet not romantic enough for the Valentine's release it's set up to be.
Are there any rapping grannies in the house?
Reviewer: Anne Gilbert





