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About a Boy
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Directed by Chris Weitz, Paul Weitz.
London's most frequently eligible bachelor gets some lessons in growing up from a maladroit 12-year-old boy in this third big-screen adaptation of a Nick Hornby novel, directed and co-written by siblings Chris and Paul Weitz of American Pie fame. About a Boy concerns the parallel coming-of-age stories of the thirtysomething Will (Hugh Grant), a layabout "serial nice guy" living a posh, carefree lifestyle off his deceased father's fortune; and the preteen Marcus (Nicholas Hoult), a bright but awkward youth who's tired of his mom Fiona's (Toni Collette) depressed, boyfriend-less state. Their paths collide when Will, deciding that single mothers are the easiest romantic conquests on the dating scene, fabricates a two-year-old son and joins a group called S.P.A.T. (Single Parents Alone Together). Marcus is wise to Will's scheme, however, and through some incessant pestering and blackmail, he contrives for Will to date Fiona. Though Will doesn't hit it off immediately with either Marcus or his mother, he gradually begins to open up to the people around him -- so much so that he attracts the attention of another attractive single mom (Rachel Weisz). A U.S./U.K. co-production of Robert DeNiro's Tribeca Films and Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner's Working Title (the company responsible for the Grant-related Four Weddings and a Funeral and Bridget Jones's Diary), About a Boy was co-written by What's Eating Gilbert Grape creator Peter Hedges. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
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unclefesteringunclefestering I was the star of The Will Show
by unclefestering in unclefestering Blog
hasn't rated it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"About a Boy is often tagged as a comedy, which is a shame. After a couple of funny scenes in the beginning the movie settles into a deeper look into the stalled lives of two boys. One a 12-year-old whose mother works to keep him sheltered from the world and prevents him from becoming a teenager and the other a 36-year-old loner who never learned to become an adult. This isn’t to say that there aren’t funny scenes throughout the movie. There are plenty of them.: almost all the restaurant scenes, when Will has to explain how he makes a living, and in part the big show at the finale. But these are touching funny moments; not the laugh until you cry “Best Comedy of the Year!” moments promised by the DVD box. Part of the reason is that the humor is balanced by pathos. The basic plot is that Will is a handsome, 36-year-old man who has plenty of money, no career, no ambitions and is never looking for a long term relationship. After deciding that single mothers are ... " [More]
TenenbaumsTenenbaums In With The Out Crowd
by Tenenbaums in Tenenbaums Blog
loved it.
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"The Rage in Placid Lake is a beautiful, funny encouragement to lead a less structured life in order to achieve greater happiness. The titular character, so named by his anti-establishment parents in hopes of him living up to that image, is a human Gumby in the middle of a frantic social tug-of-war. Placid’s parents use him as a guinea pig for exercising their oddball societal beliefs. Their clueless experiments consistently transform Placid into a lamb to the slaughter, similar to Marcus in About A Boy. The continual adolescent opposition Placid faces as a result of his stark differences is personified by the brutal ostracism and fists of three bullies. These abusive classmates are the epitome of the Lake parents’ collective enemies and yet the adults continue to assume that their failed vicarious efforts are beneficial to their son. Poor, mangled, confused Placid.And then there is Gemma, Placid’s lifelong platonic female friend who has been the only rock in ... " [More]
JimBellJimBell About a Boy
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
liked it.
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"About a Boy has a plot I love: A 38-year old cad goes to a single parents support group to seduce more women but winds up sort of befriending a nerdy young teenage boy. In the process, both boy and cad earn some needed friends. The strongest elements of the movie are the acting and the look of the characters. Even the beautiful woman that the cad finally falls for looks realistically different in every scene. The weak elements are the voice overs and the theme. The voice overs give the movie a detached feel. A la Woody Allen, the voice-over can convey irony, but in About a Boy it usually just conveys information, including the theme which the young lad spells out for us more than once. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
A thoroughly pleasant but decidedly un-romantic comedy boasting another witty star turn from Hugh Grant, this Nick Hornby adaptation belongs to the increasingly common subgenre of hybrid British-American comedy-dramas that are easy enough going down, but may leave viewers with a few naggingly unresolved character arcs and motivations. As a funny, involving tale of redemption for a lazy, spoiled lad edging toward middle age, About a Boy succeeds. Hugh Grant is one of the few actors since Cary Grant who can remain likeable even as he's committing near-despicable acts of dishonesty, and directors Chris and Paul Weitz have found a perfect foil for him in the disarmingly guileless Nicholas Hoult. They've also managed to make their first genuinely stylish film, shot with grainy aplomb by Remi Adefarasin (less successful are editor Nick Moore's showy jump cuts and wipe transitions). But their script, written with Peter Hedges, leaves something to be desired in its romantic half. By the time About a Boy reveals the charming but ineffectual love interest Rachel Weisz, audiences may be long past the point of caring if, when, or with whom its cad of a protagonist is going to settle down. It doesn't help that the luminous Toni Collette, though saddled with a frump of a role, walks off with every scene she's in, and has unlimited depth and chemistry with Grant. Though the Weitz brothers have proven that they have heart to spare when it comes to their lovelorn heroes -- American Pie proved as much -- ultimately, they're not as democratic when it comes to some of their supporting characters, and engaging as it is, About a Boy can't help but suffer as a result. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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