Hope
Springs Movie Review:
After
finding out his fiancé Vera (Driver) has been cheating
on him and is about to marry another man, Colin (Firth)
backs his bags and flies to Maine, USA. He finds solace
in the sleepy little town of Hope, were the locals are as
nosey as they are friendly. Still feeling depressed and
extremely downtrodden, the hotel manager Joanie (Steenburgen)
asks her care-worker friend Mandy (Graham) to take a look
at the lovelorn Englishman. The pair get closer as they
send more time together but that is all thrown into whack
when Vera arrives.
Romantic
Comedies and period dramas are what Colin Firth is becoming
known for and with Hope Springs, his reputation isn't going
to change.
This
is Colin Firth at his most English. Playing the part he
plays in most of his romantic comedies, whatever period
they are set in. He is the upper class, bumbling Englishman
that is stereotypical of what the Americans want to see
us as. In fact Hugh Grant and he have cornered the market
in this character. He needs to move away from mushy leads
in romantic comedies and stretch his acting abilities like
he did playing the Earl of Wessex in Shakespeare in Love
before he gets pigeon holed in this type of role forever.
The
movie itself suffers from a complete lack of both romance
and comedy. Even though she is extremely beautiful, Heather
Graham just doesn't have any screen chemistry with Colin
Firth. The two of them just don't look right together, leading
to a lack of believability in the story and any kind of
romance between them. You can't imagine him having a relationship
with Minnie Driver's character either, as she just isn't
a nice person at all.
The
eccentric townsfolk, who are supposed to be the comic relieve
just succumb to small town USA stereotypes consumed with
gossip and the mistrust of outsiders. Oliver Platt does
his best with his limited role as the town's mayor and Mary
Steenburgen is severely underused as the hotel manager.
The ensemble cast deserves a lot better than this as the
script only ever manages to raise a slight smile as the
predictable ending comes to pass.
This
is severely average twaddle and the movie will only appeal
to the true romantic and the emotionally sloppy.
Jamie
Kelwick
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