The Movie Insider
The Movie Insider
Movie Showtimes & Tickets
HomeLatest Movies News Headlines & RumorsBrowse All MoviesMovie ReviewsComing Soon to TheatersCelebrity IntereviewsMovie Photos, Spy Shots and Production StillsBox Office ResultsCelebrities What's on DVD?Screening Room
break
break


break

break
movie reviews
Music and Lyrics (2007)

In spite of its formulaic trappings, Music and Lyrics is as sweet and likeable as its title is bland—in another word, quite. Milking the established screen personas of Hugh Grant and Drew Barrymore for all their worth, the film succeeds at the basic level romantic comedies must succeed, in that it features two characters we would like to see together by the time the credits roll. Amazing, really, that most romantic comedies fail on this primary level and that one which actually accomplishes this seems like such a small diamond in the genre rough. There's nothing new or revolutionary the film adds to genre, but certain elements of its conventional journey from start to finish seem fresh. The reason: What happens is predictable, but how it happens, more times than not, stems from the characters. Although the clichéd conventions and progression of the genre are here (seemingly incompatible couple meets, falls in love, breaks off relationship, and gets back together in some overly sentimental way), writer/director Marc Lawrence cares more about his characters than fulfilling the obligatory standards set forth by so many genre clones.

The credits roll over a dead-on spoof of an '80s music video, featuring the pop band PoP and their big, insufferably catchy hit "Pop! Goes My Heart." The '80s are now only retro kitsch, and Alex Fletcher (Grant), one of the two founders of the band (the other has gone on to great success), is meeting to appear on "Battle of the '80s Has-beens." Unfortunately, he learns it’s a boxing show, not a music competition. Spending his dwindling fame working at hotel and theme park engagements, Alex's manager Chris (Brad Garrett) finally gives him some good news. A young teenage pop star named Cora Corman (a beautiful but awkward Haley Bennett) likes his music with PoP and wants to give him a chance to write her new song. Alex can handle melody, but after his universally panned lyrically attempts on his first and only solo album, he has no intention of repeating that debacle. Enter Sophie Fisher (Barrymore), a replacement plant-waterer with an uncanny knack for finishing rhymes. As it turns out, Sophie is a displaced writer, and Alex decides to take a risk and take her on as his lyricist for the project.

Of course, their personalities clash. Barrymore is her characteristic intelligent but constantly frazzled character; Grant is his smarmily charming persona. Grant's ability to exude sarcasm is taken advantage of from the beginning, as he assures the network executives for the boxing special that, yes, he is a "happy has-been." And why wouldn't he be? He has women in their late 30s going crazy over him when he performs at 20-year high school reunions at hotel banquet halls, although it is getting harder to do the band's famous "hip pop" move without straining a few important muscles. Sophie's undergoing some hard times, too.

Page 1 of 2:
-1-2
Review continued on next page »
REVIEWER RATING:


e-mail this page | printable format | give feedback | related rss
Home | News | Browse Movies | Reviews | Coming Soon | Now Playing | Interviews | Photos | Box Office | Celebrities | On DVD | Screening Room | MOST POPULAR | more...
Copyright ©1999–2008. All rights reserved.
Terms and Conditions  Privacy Statement