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Eight Days a Week
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Many a lovesick young man has threatened to camp out by a girl's front door, but one guy actually tries it in this alternately sweet and tasteless romantic comedy. Peter (Josh Schaefer) is a good-natured but socially inept young man who is madly in love with Erica (Keri Russell), the sweet and devastatingly sexy girl next door. Peter desperately wants Erica as his girlfriend, even though she already has a boyfriend, the large and humorless Nick (Johnny Green). Eager to prove himself, Peter takes up the advice of Nonno (Buck Kartalian), his batty grandfather, and literally camps out on her front lawn, willing to wait out the entire summer until she gives him a chance to prove that he can be the man of her dreams. Meanwhile, Peter is frequently kept company by his buddy Matt (R.D. Robb), who has learned how to deal with his sexual tensions through the use of fresh fruit, while Peter's dad (Mark Taylor) is convinced that his son has gone nuts and won't allow him back in the house, even for a change of clothes. While it won the Audience Award at the 1997 Slamdance Film Festival, Eight Days a Week didn't receive much commercial exposure until its release on video, after Keri Russell had made a splash on the acclaimed TV series Felicity. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
This amusing little 1997 indie prefigured the sweet-but-gross teen formula of American Pie, but it adds a dose of laconic quirkiness and even a bit of a Rear Window riff. Josh Schaefer embodies the perfect combination of puppy-dog adorability and wistful nerdiness as Peter, the lovestruck protagonist, while R.D. Robb embraces his orgasm-obsessed sidekick character with a knowing humor that's missing from most such outré teen material. Keri Russell brings the exact same qualities to her pert, inscrutable prom queen as she does to her character on the WB's Felicity; whether such winsome self-possession enchants or rankles will depend on the prejudices of the individual viewer. Russell's character, however, is almost incidental; this is a good-natured story of one guy's obsession -- and of the worm's-eye view his perennial campout affords him of his neighborhood's many offbeat inhabitants. As Peter observes the wacky widows, horny housewives, and potentially wife-murdering neighbors who surround him, his own romance suddenly doesn't seem so quixotic. Such simple, suburban truths may seem sophomoric, but Eight Days a Week sketches them out with enough wide-eyed affability that its coming-of-age earnestness ultimately charms. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 

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