The Proposal Movie Review
The Proposal Review

"The Proposal" Overview

Rating: 12
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Anne FletcherProducer : David Hoberman, Todd Lieberman
Screenwiter : Peter Chiarell
Starring : Sandra Bullock,Ryan Reynolds,Betty White,Mary Steenburgen,Craig T Nelson,Denis O'Hare,Malin Akerman,Oscar Nunez
As brightly enjoyable as this film is, there's no escaping the fact that it's
yet another formulaic rom-com. Bullock and Reynolds have enough chemistry to
keep us smiling, even though we never buy it for a second.
Margaret (Bullock) is a ruthless editor in New York whose efficient assistant
Andrew (Reynolds) can't stand her. But when Margaret finds out she's being
deported back to her native Canada, she talks Andrew into marrying her. To
convince the probing immigration agent (O'Hare), she accompanies Andrew home to
see his parents (Steenburgen and Nelson) in Alaska. And over the course of the
weekend, their plan begins unravel even as they begin to see each other as
humans for a change.
The screenplay tries to mix things up with Andrew's school sweetheart
(Akerman), who lurks quietly around the edge of the film waiting for her
moment. And there's also the father-son tension between Andrew and his dad,
nicely played by both Reynolds and Nelson as something a bit harsher than we
usually see in these kinds of movies. Meanwhile, White does her usual enjoyable
shtick as Andrew's sassy granny, and Steenburgen holds things together with a
solid supporting turn.
But what holds our interest is the banter between Bullock and Reynolds, who
have a terrific off-handed prickliness that plays extremely well on-screen and
even works in the more emotional screens. They actually make us believe that
these two control freaks are actually falling for each other, although calling
it love seems a bit of a stretch. At least watching them is great fun,
especially when Bullock indulges in some nicely staged slapstick.
Otherwise, we have lots of gorgeous Alaskan scenery and a couple of terrific
set pieces, including a zany naked encounter and a surreal incident with the
fluffy family dog. But the filmmakers seem to rely so much on their stars that
they pretty much ignore the sideplots, never making anything of the love
triangle or O'Hare's smarmy agent. Instead, they give extra screen time to the
oh-so-goofy Ramone (Nunez), who's only funny because he keeps showing up. But
he does add a deranged touch, and never manages to steal a scene from our
heroes.
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Review by Rich Cline
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