Must Love Dogs Movie Review
Must Love Dogs Review

"Must Love Dogs" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Gary David GoldbergProducer : Gary David Goldberg,Jennifer Todd,Suzanne Todd
Screenwiter : Gary David Goldberg
Starring : Diane Lane,John Cusack,Elizabeth Perkins,Christopher Plummer,Dermot Mulroney
Hollywood overexposes young starlets, from Lindsay Lohan to Scarlett Johansson,
and puts distinguished veterans on pedestals. Yet the industry has no idea how
to handle an actress once she reaches her late thirties or forties. Lacking
suitable offers for mainstream parts, these talented ladies either pour their
fortunes into vanity projects (Salma Hayek in Frida), turn to lower-budget
independent fare (Holly Hunter in Thirteen), or dabble in primetime television
(The Shield lures Glenn Close, and Teri Hatcher is reborn as a Desperate
housewife).
A recent trend finds older but still attractive actresses downheartedly
treading water in the dating pool for the benefit of a far-fetched plot.
Heather Locklear played a flighty single mom unlucky in love for Hilary Duff’s
The Perfect Man. Now Oscar-nominee Diane Lane is taking her turn in the barrel
with improved results.
Eight months after her bitter divorce, Sarah (Lane) sifts through her large
Irish family’s misguided matchmaking attempts and wonders aloud if she’ll ever
find love again. With unsolicited assistance from her older sister, Carol
(Elizabeth Perkins), Sarah posts a profile to an Internet dating website and
enters a steady stream of social disasters. Two suitors gradually rise to the
surface: smarmy but outwardly nice Bob (played by smarmy Dermot Mulroney), and
intense but ultimately decent Jake (John Cusack).
Writer/director Gary David Goldberg, a sitcom scribe with M*A*S*H and The Bob
Newhart Show on his resume, mines a Claire Cook novel for small, steady, and
consistent laughs. His breezy and light charmer is sentimental and blessed with
a heart. Dogs also makes some soft comments on cyber dating through Stockard
Channing. Initially interested in Sarah’s father (the smooth Christopher
Plummer), she gets caught in a pinch after fudging the facts on her own dating
profile.
Since they grace the poster, we know Lane and Cusack are meant to mate, though
the two share a minimal chemistry that’s slow to form. We almost have more fun
when the main couple is apart and interacting with their supporting players.
Cusack’s on cruise control, not sinking to sleepwalking level but hitting his
marks with the casual stride of someone who’s explored this territory before.
His shuffle stands out in contrast to the nimble juggling act managed by Lane.
Goldberg throws in filler for his final frames to keep his leads apart longer
and prolong the inevitable. Mulroney returns, Sarah endures a few more bad
blind dates, and we patiently wait. Even vehicles on autopilot eventually reach
their destinations, though, and Dogs proves to be an easy ride.
Must not love dogs that much!
|
Review by Sean O'Connell
|






