Nine Months Movie Review
Nine Months Review
"Nine Months" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Chris ColumbusProducer :
Screenwiter : Chris Columbus
Starring : Hugh Grant,Julianne Moore,Robin Williams,Tom Arnold,Joan Cusack
Nine Months has all the makings of an incredible disaster. First, its star
(Hugh Grant) is arrested for lewd conduct. Second, it's a remake of a French
film (Neuf Mois), always a huge negative. Finally, it's a comedy decidedly for
adults which is directed by the infantile Chris Columbus, the man who brought
us the Home Alone franchise and Mrs. Doubtfire.
Imagine my shock; Nine Months is pretty good.
The success of the film is due entirely to the radiant presence of Julianne
Moore as Rebecca, a woman who finds herself unintentionally pregnant and with
no clue as to what to do. Grant plays Samuel, the world's most neurotic
boyfriend, who has to "grow up" and come to grips with the fact that his
convertible has no room for a baby seat.
Rounding out the cast are Tom Arnold and Joan Cusack, a pair of obnoxious
breeders that serve as foils for the cathartic Samuel. Robin Williams plays a
bumbling, Russian obstetrician who seems to be learning about pregnancy at the
same time as Rebecca. You don't have to look far beyond the last three actors'
names to figure out what goes on when they're on the screen: raw, unfiltered,
and often unnecessarily vulgar, comedy.
Nine Months hits the metaphor pretty hard... never missing a moment to tell us
just how great the pregnancy-childbirth experience is, and Samuel is constantly
rebuked for his beliefs that the world is overpopulated and (more importantly)
that he will be incapable of being a good father. The result is a pretty
heavy-handed "message" movie that will not stop beating its theme into the
viewer.
It drags a bit at times, and the film never becomes really engrossing, but
whenever Moore is on screen, none of that seems to matter. The emotion and
power she puts into her performance make every second of the film worth
watching, if only to get to Julianne's next scene. It might not be the best
way to make a film work, but in this day and age I'll take just about anything.
Nine Months is a film with a huge identity crisis. Columbus obviously couldn't
give up slapstick (i.e. Home Alone), filling what could have been a touching
romance with antics that are entirely out of place here. Again, this is not a
kids' movie, as the mother of the child who sat behind me at the screening can
attest to (when he asked what a particularly explicit piece of anatomy was).
Incidentally, I had the fortune to see this film with a woman who happens to be
currently pregnant. She loved the film ("double thumbs up") and was pretty
impressed with the realism given to Rebecca's experience. As she put it, only
the constant puking was missing.
Come to think of it, I'm not sure I needed to see that anyway.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





