Prime Movie Review
Prime Review
"Prime" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Ben YoungerProducer : Jennifer Todd,Suzanne Todd,Mark Gordon
Screenwiter : Ben Younger
Starring : Uma Thurman,Meryl Streep,Bryan Greenberg,Jon Abrahams,Adriana Biasi,David Younger,Aubrey Dollar
The title makes no sense – when you hear Prime, you expect a movie about
numbers or meat – but the sentiments found in this cute romantic comedy are
easily identifiable. Writer/director Ben Younger follows up his
stocks-and-bombs thriller Boiler Room with an unpolished but idealistic date
fling that sounds like a sitcom setup but has more charm than a television set
could contain.
Younger aimed high when casting for his sweet screenplay and attached two
marquee names to his personal endeavor. Meryl Streep dons a frumpy wig and
horn-rimmed spectacles to create Lisa Metzger, a Manhattan mensch and doting
psychotherapist currently treating newly divorced, statuesque blonde bombshell
Rafi Gardet (Uma Thurman). Following Lisa’s advice to let loose a little, Rafi
enters a relationship with David (Bryan Greenberg), a lower East Side painter
who happens to be 14 years younger… and Lisa’s son.
Going in to Prime, I didn’t think it would offer much more beyond this
mistaken-identity premise. What a pleasant surprise to discover that Younger
looks beyond the minimal twist and brings up legitimate concerns for this
mismatched couple. Lisa figures out that Rafi and David are a couple before
Rafi realizes the connection between her therapist and her lover. She’s torn
between the professional obligations to her patient and her natural maternal
instincts, a divide made credible by Streep’s subtle decisions in character.
As an added bonus, Younger works through his film’s issues with patience and
compassion. Scenes that could have been played for broad laughs instead further
the pair’s fledgling relationship, which has the potential to fly like an eagle
or dissolve like a salt grain in a bucket of water.
Younger’s directorial flourishes do lean toward the easy laughs. He loves
predictable reaction shots, cutting to sushi chefs and Rafi’s stoic doorman on
more than one occasion. He also relies heavily on ethnic humor, playfully
poking fun at the conservative Jewish community in ways that usually play
better in the confines of New York’s five boroughs. He remembers to think
outside the box, though, and penned a handful of guffaws that resulted in a few
jokes being lost to crowd noise as my preview audience roared through the film’
s funniest lines. When a joke hits its mark, Younger can’t help but return to
it. The sight of a grandmother hitting herself in the head with a frying pan
was funny once, not three times.
But there’s chemistry galore, both romantic (between Thurman and Greenberg) and
anxious (between Streep and just about every character she interacts with).
Greenberg reminds me of a personable Hayden Christensen. He makes David a
genuinely likable guy, an inexperienced “playa” who's out of his league but
lucky enough to find a damaged goddess in need of a tender boost. Prime could
have been a one-joke pony. Instead, it competently trots through predictable
terrain that proves to be worth exploring once again.
Needs seasoned salt.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





