Directed by: Adam Brooks
Premise: While going through a divorce, a
disillusioned middle-aged man (Ryan Reynolds) tells the story of his love life
to his precocious eleven-year-old daughter (Abigail Breslin).
What Works: Definitely, Maybe is a terrific
film that mixes humor with dramatic romance and is able to get into the messy
nuts and bolts of love and courtship. The story is set up intelligently with
Reynold’s character narrating his own story and acting it out in flashback.
Aside from the frame narrative, the story does more than just tell one man’s
romantic woes; Reynold’s character begins as an idealistic employee on Bill
Clinton’s initial presidential campaign and as his love life and growth as a
human being develop together as his idealism is shattered along with Clinton’s
own romantic woes. In this way, Definitely, Maybe is able to link the
character’s trouble with love with the rest of his life rather than isolating
his romantic problems as though the rest of his existence was perfect. It’s a
very real portrayal of love and life that is above and beyond the typical
romantic comedy.
What Doesn’t: At the very end the film gets a
little sappy as father and daughter come together. But the film’s very end
comes just in time to save it from truly damaging the integrity of the film.
Bottom Line: Definitely, Maybe is a great
romantic film. Like Love,
Actually this film avoids cliché and mostly avoids sentimentality while
getting at some of the real, complex, and often ignored issues behind love and
romance in today’s world.