BEFORE: Short story, I took a day off and I dropped "17 Again" - for now. The long version is that "17 Again" was playing on Hulu a week or two ago, and now it's not. It's a pet peeve of mine that sometimes movies disappear JUST before I'm scheduled to watch them, it doesn't happen often because a movie can be on a streaming platform for two years or more, but Murphy's Law and all that - which is WHY I still rely primarily on hard-copy DVDs and what's stored on my DVR. No system can be foolproof, of course, because DVDs get scratched and DVD players break down and DVRs crash and sometimes digital files get deleted or are corrupted. So I do the best I can to work around these technical issues, but a film being dropped from ALL streaming platforms, that's out of my control AND it points out that I've been putting my faith in something that can turn on a dime.
It's OK, "17 Again" was going to be the middle of a three-film Matthew Perry chain, and without it, the chain's just going to close up around it and I can just continue without re-working the chain. "17 Again" is just a cheezy body-swap comedy anyway, I wasn't even sure it had anything about romance in it, and I added it at the last minute anyway, comparatively speaking anyway. Look, I was on the fence about even including it here, because the chain is just fine, maybe even stronger, without it. It goes back into the holding pen, and here at the Movie Year, we believe in the "Burned Toast" theory that states that if something bad happens, it could be better in the long run, we just don't know. If you burn your toast some morning, it sets your schedule back five minutes while you re-make the toast, and for all you know, this puts you on the highway at a different time, and you avoid a fatal car crash. So here's to burned toast. There could be a situation later this year or next February where "17 Again" will be exactly the film I need to connect two parts of the chain, right now there's no way to know.
Anyway, I was working on Saturday, a long shift at a film festival, and I came home and all I wanted was a can of chili and two beers and to shut down for a while, and on top of everything else, it was the night where we set the clocks forward and LOSE an hour of sleep, so suddenly it was 3 am and I hadn't started my film yet, and then I couldn't even FIND the film I wanted to watch on streaming without paying $4.99, and I really couldn't even keep my eyes open at that point, so you know what, I called the game. No movie on Sunday, and then came a sense of relief and a very deep sleep - let's say it was the full nine hours, because I didn't have to be anywhere or do anything on Sunday except wait for "Tournament of Champions" to come around on Food Network, we could order Italian and just chill out and watch chefs compete in our own personal form of "March Madness" bracket competition. It's fine, I can skip a day and make it up in November, the beauty of dropping a film and NOT replacing it with anything is that I'm still on track to hit St. Patrick's Day on time. So I didn't miss out on "17 Again", it missed out on ME.
Matthew Perry carries over from "Serving Sara", and I just have to track TWO days of TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" to catch up. The themes for today, Monday March 9 are "Oscar Goes Steady (Young Love)" and "Oscar Goes Silent":
6:00 am "Romeo and Juliet" (1937)
8:15 am "Four Daughters" (1938)
10:00 am "Janie" (1944)
11:45 am "Little Women" (1933)
1:45 pm "Splendor in the Grass" (1961)
4:00 pm "Rebel Without a Cause" (1955)
6:00 pm "East of Eden" (1955)
8:00 pm "Sunrise" (1927)
10:00 pm "The Artist" (2011)
12:00 am "Wings" (1927)
2:30 am "The Racket" (1928)
4:00 am "The Crowd" (1928)
5:45 am "The Circus" (1928)
I think just four today, I've seen "Splendor in the Grass", "Rebel Without a Cause", "East of Eden" and "The Artist" - I still think somebody at TCM wants to do proper linking, because just LOOK they put two James Dean films next to each other. Maybe next year. But now I'm up to 120 seen out of 283, or 42.4 %
That covers Day 25, Day 26 is Tuesday, March 10 and the themes are "Oscar Goes to Work" and "Oscar Goes on a Bender" with a special tribute to Robert Duvall in-between:
7:00 am "The Front Page" (1931)
8:45 am "Bachelor Mother" (1939)
10:15 am "Woman of the Year" (1942)
12:00 pm "Bells Are Ringing" (1960)
2:15 pm "Solid Gold Cadillac" (1956)
4:00 pm "Executive Suite" (1954)
6:00 pm "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" (1974)
8:00 pm "Tender Mercies" (1983)
10:00 pm "The Great Santini" (1979)
12:15 am "Apocalypse Now" (1979)
3:45 am "The Champ" (1979)
6:00 am "A Star Is Born" (1937)
OK, I've seen "Woman of the Year", "Bells Are Ringing", "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore", "Tender Mercies", "Apocalypse Now" (of course) and "The Champ", but those are the versions of "The Front Page" and "A Star Is Born" that I have not watched - so another 6 seen brings me to 126 seen out of 295, or 42.7%, I'm still in OK shape. Just 5 days left until the big dance.
THE PLOT: After a one-night stand with Alex, Isabel realizes she is pregnant and they decide to get married. However, along with the marriage come compromises of their cultural traditions.
AFTER: Finally, it's a romance that's ABOUT something, a few things really, one of which is being able to look for signs from the universe that you've found the right person. Similar, perhaps, to paying attention to signs from the universe that it's not the right time to watch "17 Again". I've learned to read both kinds of signs. It's possible, however, that we each are capable of being with several different people, or several KINDS of people over the course of our lives, so there's not really a "one", but it can be fun to pretend that sometimes. Hey, if you find someone who you can live with and, more importantly, can put up with YOU, then take the win.
It's also about compromise - if a marriage or a live-together relationship is going to succeed, it's going to take a lot of compromise. Where are we going to live, what are we going to do on the weekends, what are we going to eat for dinner? (Every night, the same question - for the REST OF YOUR LIFE!). This is a film about two people who get married and then both have to learn this lesson about compromise in turn, and in so doing they kind of live apart for a while but then, eventually, you know, get back together. At first what's keeping them together is the pregnancy, but is that enough to build an impulsive marriage on? The marriage seems like a crazy idea at first, like they barely know each other, but they already know they find each other attractive, and they're sexually compatible, is THAT enough? Compatibility is a bit like publicity, you just never really know if you have enough of it. But hey, they're willing to try.
They come from different cultures, this shouldn't be a problem here in the big ol' melting pot we call the USA, but to just gloss over any difference in their backgrounds wouldn't really work, you have to be aware of the differences. Alex is a New Yorker, but comes from a white upper-class (?) family in Connecticut. Of course. And Isabel is of Mexican heritage, but her family is all in the Las Vegas area. Alex is only working in Las Vegas and eventually wants to design clubs back in New York when he's done with the Vegas one, that's really a minefield of a conversation that he's avoided for just a bit too long. I get it, once you've lived in Manhattan it's kind of hard to live somewhere else. But maybe hang out in Vegas for a bit, Alex, because I think they're about to build a FAKE New York City there very soon....
Isabel doesn't think New York City is "real" - but it's very real to Alex. What's funny is that when we spent a week in Las Vegas in 2019, we went to fake Venice, fake New York, and fake Paris, also fake Egypt (the Luxor). Eventually my mind put it together and I realized that almost nothing was "real" in Vegas, there were just fake versions of other cities and countries. To highlight this, we had a room in that fake pyramid and we went to see the "Legends" concert, which had a fake Elvis, fake Pat Benatar, fake Lady Gaga and fake Freddie Mercury. (We also went to the Neon Museum, which you see in this movie at one point, it's really just a collection of old signs from the casinos and steakhouses that have been torn down over the years. Still, very interesting.)
Alex also avoids telling his parents that he got married and has a baby on the way - but Isabel happens to bump into his ex-girlfriend, who's friends with his parents, and she clues them in that they should go and visit their son, which they do. If you thought that Alex was a "fish out of water" in Vegas, his parents, two older people from New England, are even worse. They burn in the sun and also have some very outdated opinions about Mexican people, but the one thing both fathers agree on is that their children got married too soon and too impulsively. OK, so at least there's some common ground...
The other big problem here is a lack of communication - two people can't learn to compromise until they can first communicate to each other what they want, then maybe their differences can be resolved. Without the communication, not so much. So yeah, I'd say this film gets a lot of things right, it's not just all slapstick about New Yorkers trying to survive in a desert environment - though there is SOME of that. But at its heart is two people who decide quickly to get married, and then the screenwriter starts wondering what could possibly go wrong, namely everything.
Isabel wants to stay in Nevada, near her parents, Alex gets offered another club to design, only it's back in NYC, and Isabel's father disowns her because he wanted her to have a big family wedding, and is not happy that she got married in a small chapel by an Elvis impersonator. Is that even a real wedding, if Elvis is fake? After a medical complication, Isabel implies that she lost the baby and tells Alex they're not meant to be together. He goes back to New York but this is when he starts seeing "signs" that remind him of their life together, like a photo of the Grand Canyon or somebody with a chihuahua dog. So he travels all the way to rural Mexico, where he thinks Isabel is staying with her great-grandmother, only to find that she went BACK to Las Vegas to have the baby. If it seems like it takes a long time for these two to get on the same page, you're not wrong, but at least it seems like a journey worth taking.
We can file this one under "It's Complicated" but at least we know everything's probably going to work itself out in the end.
Directed by Andy Tennant (director of "Fool's Gold" and "The Bounty Hunter")
Also starring Salma Hayek (last heard in "Puss in Boots: The Last Wish"), Jon Tenney (last seen in "Love the Coopers"), Carlos Gomez (last seen in "Trial by Fire"), Tomas Milian (last seen in "The Yards"), Siobhan Fallon Hogan (last seen in "New in Town"), John Bennett Perry (last seen in "The Sweetest Thing"), Stanley DeSantis (last seen in "Clockwatchers"), Suzanne Snyder, Anne Betancourt (last seen in "Life as a House"), Jill Clayburgh (last seen in "De Palma"), Angelina Torres (last seen in "All the Pretty Horses"), Debby Shively, Mark Adair-Rios (last seen in "I'll See You in My Dreams"), Annie Combs, Shelley Morrison (last seen in "Divorce American Style"), Maria Cellario, Irene Hernandez, Josh Cruze (last seen in "80 for Brady"), Angela Lanza (last seen in "Shorts"), Randy Sutton, Christopher Michael, Angel Valdez, Cesar Santana, Garret Davis, Chris O'Neill, Andrew Hill Newman, Chris Bauer (last seen in "Thunderbolts"), Douglas Weston (last seen in "Six Days Seven Nights"), Jan Austell (last seen in "Random Hearts"), Cydney Arther, Leslie Silva (last seen in "Babygirl"), Maryann Plunkett (last seen in "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood"), Juel Mendel, Eddie Powers (last seen in "3000 Miles to Graceland"), Salvador Saldana, Robert Arevalo, Sheila Surkes Scotti, with a cameo from Beth Broderick (last seen in "The Bonfire of the Vanities")
RATING: 7 out of 10 rattlesnakes (a group is called a "rhumba", BTW)
