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Catch And Release
Reviewed by Rich Drees
Not many romantic comedies open with a scene set just after a
funeral. But Catch And Release, for better or worse, strives
not to be an ordinary romantic comedy. In fact, for most the first
part of its runtime, it plays as an anti-romantic-comedy in some
respects, where the main character spends more time falling out of
love rather than into it.
Days before her
wedding, Gray Wheeler’s (Jennifer Garner) life is torn apart when
her fiancée is killed in an accident on his bachelor party weekend.
The film opens with the open house after his funeral, Gray
struggling to maintain her composure even when the bakery
inadvertently delivers a no-longer-needed wedding cake. Helping her
to get past this tragedy is her fiancée’s two friends- Sam
(writer/director Kevin Smith making a rare appearance outside of his
own films) and Dennis (Sam Jaeger). Gray soon discovers that her
fiancée had a bank account that she did not know about. But, as she
learns from Fritz, another old friend of her fiancée’s (Timothy
Olyphant), that’s the least of the secrets he was keeping from her.
The first half
of the film plays fast and loose with the standard romantic comedy
conventions, managing to wring some laughs out of the standard
situations. When Gray seeks a moment’s solace in the bathroom from
visiting well-wishers after the funeral, she inadvertently overhears
Fritz having sex with some young lady. The audacity and absurdity of
the situation almost cause her to let out an eavesdropping-revealing
laugh. The film also manages to wring some laughs from people’s
inept attempts to offer Gray sympathy. After the funeral, Gray moves
into the house that her fiancée had shared with Sam and Dennis and
the three form a friendship, with the actors generating a chemistry
that is delightful to watch.
But the film
wants to have its cake and eat it too. Not content with just
exploring Gray’s life and how she rebuilds herself as a person and
not as part of a couple, screenwriter/director Susannah Grant
embraces the standard conventions of romantic comedies as the second
half of the film unspools. Gray discovers that Fritz is quite the
boorish jerk her originally appeared to be and, after several well
familiar story beats later, the last minutes of the film leave no
doubt that before the end credits roll you know that Gray and Fritz
will be in a clinch.
But no matter
what twists are attempted with the formula, the strength of any
romantic comedy is based upon the performances more so than the
script. Garner does a nice job with subtly showing us Gray’s
transition from grief back to a normal life, while Olyphant manages
to not make his character’s early appearances in the film too
grating, which helps sell the fact that Gray would fall in love with
him later. Smith is entertaining, playing a version of himself
familiar to those who have seen his college lectures or numerous
talk show appearances. |