View all comments (1) - Comment on this review
While You Were Sleeping Movie Review
While You Were Sleeping Review
"While You Were Sleeping" Overview

Rating: PG
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Jon TurteltaubProducer : Roger Birnbaum,Joe Roth
Screenwiter : Daniel G. Sullivan,Fredric LeBow
Starring : Sandra Bullock,Bill Pullman,Peter Gallagher,Peter Boyle,Jack Warden,Glynis Johns,Micole Mercurio,Jason Bernard,Roger Birnbaum
In case you aren't already prepared, brace yourself for a literal onslaught of
summer movie romances. While You Were Sleeping is one of 1995's early
entries. It certainly isn't going to be the best.
As heavily promoted as it's been, you should know the plot by know. Sandra
Bullock is Lucy, a goofy, salt-of-the-earth Chicago Transit Authority toll
booth attendant who falls in love (at first sight) with Peter (Peter
Gallagher), a yuppie lawyer. Almost immediately after Lucy swoons, Peter gets
pushed onto the train tracks, whereupon Lucy comes to the rescue. Then the
obligatory "misunderstanding" occurs: Peter's concerned parents think Lucy is
Peter's fiancee, pulling Lucy into the family as a new member. But when
Peter's brother Jack (Bill Pullman) arrives on the scene, Lucy and Jack begin
to fall in love and, well...you get the picture.
Or maybe you don't. Most of the film is pretty nonsensical. It's predictable
at best and just plain dull most of the time, focusing ad nauseam on Lucy's
moral dilemma about whether or not to end her charade. Slapstick is the
preferred method of making the audience laugh: there is a considerable amount
of falling down and other humorous forms of injury. Peter's dysfunctional
family is good for a few laughs, but otherwise I barely cracked a smile. In
fact, the film's blatant product placement elicits groans. When asked what
Peter's favorite ice cream is, Lucy's response isn't a flavor, but rather,
"Baskin-Robbins."
The sad thing about While You Were Sleeping isn't just the lack of originality
and humor, rather, it's the statement that the film ultimately makes. The
movie's apparent bottom line is that people can be really shallow, but that's
OK, because love will conquer everything, and it doesn't matter who gets
trampled along the way. When you think about it, it's not just annoying, it's
insulting.
|
Review by Christopher Null
|
View all comments (1) - Comment on this review







