The Sweetest Thing Movie Review
The Sweetest Thing Review

"The Sweetest Thing" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Roger KumbleProducer : Cathy Konrad
Screenwiter : Nancy Pimental
Starring : Cameron Diaz,Christina Applegate,Thomas Jane,Selma Blair,Parker Posey,Jason Bateman
Cameron Diaz proved to have a knack for booty-shaking as she hustled her way
through Charlie's Angels, and the good news is The Sweetest Thing gives her
ample opportunity to shake her sweetest thing in every damn scene. The bad
news is that what is being sold as a "sweet" romantic comedy is anything but.
In fact, it's really just an overstimulated sex comedy with plenty of raunch
and crudeness… and a stifling lack of humor.
Diaz stars as Christina, an oversexed, under-committal, zeroes kind of gal
living in San Francisco. Her two roommates, Courtney (Christina Applegate) and
Jane (Selma Blair), are similar poster children for Gen X. In what might have
become an interesting spin on the genre, it's the girls who don't call back the
guys and the guys who end up whining and crying over their heartache.
But Christina wants to change her ways, driven by a chance encounter with a
Nice Guy named Peter (Thomas Jane). Only she's too afraid to meet up with him
later that night, so she figures her one shot at love is blown. Fortunately, a
couple of juicy details have been left behind -- she knows his name and that
he's attending a wedding in a nearby town that weekend -- enough to spur an
impromptu road trip with Christina and Courtney attempting to track down her
would-be soul mate.
While that's the official plot, the story is hardly anything more than a
rickety device to deliver gross-out humor, Farrelly brothers-style. For most
of its running time, The Sweetest Thing jumps from one contrived gag to the
next: We get a barrage of rude jokes about mysterious stains, dirty underwear,
maggot-infested leftovers, public toilets, glory holes, and breast implants --
all without a shred of female nudity! And none of it relates to Christina's
quest for love, either.
Porky's-style naughtiness can be fun, but the delivery vehicle needs to be more
in touch with its vulgarity. There's Something About Mary didn't take its love
story seriously, an irony that actually strengthened the film. But Diaz's
soliloquies just don't play in The Sweetest Thing, and a maddeningly drawn-out
final act, which abandons comedy altogether, drives the final nail into the
bored audience's skull.
The talent behind The Sweetest Thing is inexplicable and deserves mention.
Writer Nancy Pimental is best known as the lovely co-host and announcer on Win
Ben Stein's Money. Director Roger Kimble wrote and directed both Cruel
Intentions and Cruel Intentions 2. And Jason Bateman (who I'm thrilled to see
working again) even has a supporting role.
With such an, ahem, eclectic cast and crew, I had far higher hopes for this
Thing than it paid out. But I think most of the problems could have been fixed
by simply recasting the lead with someone much less wholesome. After all,
wouldn't this raunchy road trip have been better with Christina Applegate and…
Jenny McCarthy?
Hitchin'.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





