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The Ex
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Directed by Jesse Peretz.
Acclaimed music-video director Jesse Peretz made his third feature with this comedy starring Zach Braff and Jason Bateman. Tom (Braff) is an aspiring chef whose wife Sofia (Amanda Peet) has just quit her high-paying job to stay home with their new baby. When it becomes abundantly clear that they can no longer maintain their New York City lifestyle, the family picks up and moves to Sofia's hometown in Ohio, where Tom is hired to work at her father's ad agency. It is there that Tom meets Chip (Bateman), the agency's wheelchair-bound golden boy, who also happened to have a one-night stand with Sofia while the two were cheerleaders in high school. Suddenly, Tom finds himself sabotaged by Chip at every step as the nefarious paraplegic schemes to steal Sofia from him and destroy any chance he might have of success at the agency. Released briefly in 2006 under the title Fast Track, the film was retitled The Ex before receiving a wide release in the Spring of 2007. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
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MovieBabeMovieBabe Waitress - The Ex
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski Waitress has received plenty of attention for a reason that has nothing to do with its quality: The film’s writer, director, and co-star, Adrienne Shelly, was murdered shortly after the movie wrapped and was submitted to the Sundance Film Festival. Shelly never got to hear any reactions to Waitress. She died before she could find out that it was accepted to the festival. Happily, there’s no need for critics to go soft and sentimental because of that tragedy—Waitress is excellent, a lovely legacy for the late indie “it” girl. It’s also a triumph for Keri Russell, the film’s star. Russell plays Jenna, a Southern diner waitress with a talent for making pies. She’s miserable with her rotten husband, Earl (Jeremy Sisto), whose behavior ranges from annoying (honking repeatedly as he’s getting close when he picks her up) to abusive (casually belittling her and grabbing her when he’s angry). Jenna is squirre ... " [More]
laraemeadowslaraemeadows The Ex - Should get the axe
by laraemeadows in laraemeadows Blog
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"The Ex, staring Zach Braff and Amanda Peet is this spring’s mediocre romantic comedy. Jesse Peretz makes quick work of same old same old with a hint of the unnecessary.When married couple Tom Reilly (Braff) and Sofia Kowalski (Peet) decide they need a fresh start, they move from New York to the Midwest. Tom takes a job at Sofia’s father’s advertising company and Sofia decides to leave her law practice to be a stay at home mom. When Tom gets to work on the first day he learns that one of his co-workers had a brief relationship with his wife and his father-in-law loves him like a son. Chip Sanders (Jason Bateman) uses his wheelchair-bound status as a weapon to undermine Tom and attempts to ruin him personally and professionally.The role of Tom Reilly fits Zach Braff well. The uncomfortable, unstable, unsteady Tom doesn’t seem like much of a leap for Braff. I wonder if Braff was actually playing himself. Still, his portrayal of a dad and husband trying t ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
The spirit of a good Farrelly brothers movie comes alive in The Ex, a surprisingly likeable comedy, with just enough oddball curves up its sleeve to avoid feeling overly familiar. In fact, in the same year the Farrellys released their misanthropic version of The Heartbreak Kid, director Jesse Peretz reminds them how to get their own tone right -- without losing the naughty edginess. To extend the analogy, Zach Braff's playing the role that Ben Stiller used to play better than he currently does, exasperated yet earnest. In such a broad physical comedy, Braff could have slouched toward his tired Scrubs mugging, but here he shows that his more hifalutin projects have rubbed off on him -- at least a little bit. That broad physicality is no indictment, however, as the definite key to this film is Braff's rival, played by Jason Bateman, who's wheelchair-bound yet unworthy of the sympathy usually associated with that. Any viewer who wondered how they were going to pull that off need not worry -- Bateman makes his Chip deliciously detestable, but without crossing over into camp. Their bitter jockeying plays out over a number of good set pieces, most awkwardly, when the able-bodied Braff gets tricked into a game of wheelchair basketball -- where everyone else thinks he's paralyzed. The writing zips, with Amanda Peet giving it more oomph than anyone. Even Charles Grodin has a winning supporting role as Peet's father, showing he's still got whip-smart comic timing. It's risky to hand out such accolades to a relatively inconsequential comedy, but The Ex needs a little extra help, as it was brutally received by a number of critics. That's a shame, because there are a lot of laughs in this movie -- and not just guilty ones, either. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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