Two Ninas Movie Review
Two Ninas Review
"Two Ninas" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Neil TuritzProducer : Denise Doyle,E. Greg Scheinman
Screenwiter : Neil Turitz
Starring : Amanda Peet,Ron Livingston,Cara Buono,Bray Poor,Linda Larkin
Modern romantic comedies typically fall into one of two traps: either they
degenerate into teen/Gen-X pap dominated by boy band music a la Summer Catch,
or they are designed to play to jaded, middle-aged women a la The Love Letter.
Two Ninas happily takes a middle ground, presenting a thoughtful story without
a lot of raunch, without a saccharine, everything-coming-up-roses
sentimentality, and without that obnoxious soundtrack. Sure, it's no Kicking
and Screaming (though Cara Buono, who appeared in that film, has a little gag
in Two Ninas about how she likes that movie), but it's a solid and remarkably
enjoyable comic diversion that deserves a bigger audience than it will
ultimately get.
The film centers on a poor guy named Marty (Ron Livingston), one of those
struggling New York writers incapable of getting his break and unlucky in life
and love -- until by chance he ends up in the arms of two lovely women, both
named Nina (Cara Buono and Amanda Peet), and he decides to surreptitiously date
them both. Buono's Nina is fiesty and opinionated, but shares nearly all of
Marty's passions. Peet's Nina is, near as I can tell, wild in the sack. Who
will Marty end up with? Or will the two Ninas learn of Marty's duplicity?
The answers are pretty obvious, though I won't go out of my way to expose
them. Ultimately, Two Ninas' visible flaws come from its predictability, its
lack of development in Peet's character, a slow beginning, and an annoying
narration conceit, courtesy of Bray Poor (yes, that's someone's name), who
plays Marty's trusting best friend.
Despite all that, the movie is quite enjoyable, thanks to the fun chemistry
between Livingston and Buono -- a talented up-and-comer who I'd love to see
more of.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





