Tuesday 29 April 2014

Movies Review: The Other Woman, not sophisticated but fun

The Other Woman Movie StillWhile the story isn't particularly original, and the movie tends to drift over the top into broad slapstick, this comedy wins us over due to the camaraderie between the characters. Most refreshingly, this is a film about women teaming up rather than scratching each others' eyes out. So it continually catches us off guard in all the right ways.

In Manhattan, lawyer Carly (Cameron Diaz) has finally met the perfect man in Mark (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau). But just as their relationship is about to shift into something much more serious, she discovers that he has a wife, Kate (Leslie Mann), in the suburbs. Shocked, Carly and Kate realise that Mark is the person they should be angry at, so they team up to get even. When they discover that he has another mistress, Amber (Kate Upton), they recruit her to their plan as well. And then they find evidence that his business dealings are more than a little dodgy.

While the plot lends itself to a blackly comical approach, director Nick Cassavetes instead keeps everything silly and simplistic, letting the actresses overplay their scenes. Sometimes this results in something rather hilarious, but it also undermines any credibility the story might have. Mann and Coster-Waldau are the most guilty in this sense, chomping madly on the scenery. Instead, it's the way each character works together that brings the situations to life and keeps us laughing. Although a more confident approach to the material would have made the film much stronger.

So it may not be very sophisticated, but it's a lot of fun. Sure, the script contradicts its own point by providing the men these women surely must need (including Taylor Kinney as Kate's hot brother and Don Johnson as Carly's silver-fox dad). And of course there also has to be a sassy sidekick (a scene-stealing Minaj as Carly's knowing assistant). But for the most part this is a story of sisters taking control of their lives, which makes the film a cheerful antidote to the usual male-dominated movies.

Watch the trailer below..

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