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I Think I Love My Wife
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Directed by Chris Rock.
Actor/comedian Chris Rock directs and stars in this American remake of Eric Rohmer' s classic French comedy Chloe in the Afternoon. Richard Cooper (Rock) is a high-powered investment banker with a beautiful wife and two wonderful children. Though on the surface it would appear that Richard could want nothing more out of life, his thoughts always seem to drift toward sex. Whether it's during his daily commute into the city, his endless barrage of meetings, or even his downtime changing diapers at home, Richard's mind is constantly preoccupied by fantasies about the women he sees on the commuter train, on the city streets, and in the boardroom. Richard's daily life has gradually devolved into a blur of mind-numbing banality, and these days sexual fantasy has become his sole means of escaping the constant pressures of work and fatherhood. Though Richard never had any real intention of cheating on his faithful but preoccupied wife Brenda (Gina Torres), a chance run-in with his old friend Nikki (Kerry Washington) -- a drop-dead gorgeous stunner who appears at his office door one day seeking career advice from the successful banker -- finds his steely resolve fast turning flimsy. It's not long before the smitten Richard and the smoldering Nikki are meeting for clandestine lunches, and temptation begins to turn Richard's once-predictable life upside down. As his uncontrollable fantasies begin to lead him down the dangerous path of infidelity, the man who once kept his libido safely in check finds it increasingly difficult to refrain from acting on his impulses. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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theheattheheat A guide to "I Think I Love My W ...
by theheat in theheat Blog
loved it.
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"I Think I Love My Wife isn't going to win any awards for being the most hilarious comedy ever, but it will make you feel a lot better, or worse about your life - if you are, or have EVER met someone who is in a boring relationship. If you are, or have ever met someone in a relationship who isn't getting sex - this movie will be hilarious to you. The one part of this movie that stands out the most to me was the line recited by the main character portrayed by Rock that went a little like this "How could she not have sex with me and send me out into this world full of beautiful women?" That's not quoted perfectly, but close, and it makes more than perfect sense if you've ever been there. This movie is mostly for men, and mostly for men who are or know someone who have been in this sort of relationship - if that's the case, you'll most likely find it entertaining and enjoyable. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
I Think I Love My Wife, Chris Rock's second effort as a writer and director, suffers from many of the same ailments that made his debut effort, Head of State, such a chore to sit through. Rock, quite possibly the most talented stand-up comic of his era, has little facility for writing actual dialogue. The conversations he writes don't sound at all natural, but do sound an awful lot like Chris Rock the stand-up comic. This might be less of a handicap if Rock intended to make a laugh-a-minute raucous comedy, but I Think I Love My Wife wants to be an incisive portrait of married life, and on that count it's a complete failure. The biggest reason, aside from the faulty dialogue, is the fact that the female characters are never given lives of their own. They are only seen exactly how the main character sees them, and Chris Rock the director fails to distance himself from the character Chris Rock the actor portrays. His character gets all the best lines, he's constantly shown to be an excellent father, and the director wants the audience's sympathy when it comes to his desires. The "other woman" goes from sexy and desirable to crazy in the blink of an eye, and the wife is a nagging shrew until she decides not to be. Even if Rock succeeds in charming the audience into thinking his own character is worth caring about, there is not a single moment where either of the female characters are presented in any way that would make a viewer want him to end up with either of them. The film is so much in Rock's "voice" that the persistent misogyny becomes uncomfortably off-putting because one can't shake the suspicion that this fear of women is what the director intends rather than just how the character in the movie feels. Chris Rock possesses a formidable talent, but after two films it sure seems directing and screenwriting are not those talents. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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theheat
theheat
loved it.
MRSJPEAVY
MRSJPEAVY
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