DIRECTOR
Andy Tennant
SCREENWRITER
C. Jay
Cox
STORY
BY
Douglas
J. Eboch
PRODUCERS
Stokely Chaffin
Neal H. Moritz
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Andrew Dunn
MUSIC
George Fenton
EDITORS
Tory Takaki
Tracy Wadmore-Smith
CAST
Reese Witherspoon (Melanie Carmichael)
Josh Lucas (Jake Perry)
Patrick Dempsey (Andrew)
Candice Bergen (Kate)
Mary Kay Place (Pearl Smooter)
Fred Ward (Earl Smooter)
Jean Smart (Stella Kay)
Ethan Embry (Bobby Ray)
Melanie Lynskey (Lurlynn)
Courtney Gains (Wade)
Mary Lynn Rajskub (Dorothea)
Rhona Mitra (Tabatha)
Nathan Lee Graham (Frederick)
Dakota Fanning (Young Melanie)
MPAA rating: PG-13
Running
time: 105m
U.S. release: September 27, 2002
Video availability: TBA
Official
website
Other Andy
Tennant movies
reviewed on this website:
- Anna
and the King
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Watching Reese Witherspoon
in Sweet Home Alabama is like looking at a daisy floating
in a toilet: She's the best thing in it, but you wonder what
she's doing there. After about six years of being terrific in
movies whose audiences ranged from few to nobody, Witherspoon
finally broke through in last year's Legally Blonde,
an agreeable enough trifle, provided that you agreed to overlook
the film's rampant lameness and concentrate on Reese. Sadly,
her overdue success appears to have taught Witherspoon that sharp,
offbeat scripts (Freeway,
Pleasantville, Election,
etc.) are not the way to go, and so we get Sweet Home Alabama,
not a frame of which, curiously, was actually filmed there; Georgia
and Florida stand in for Alabama, though New York City gets to
play itself.
Here, Witherspoon is Melanie
Carmichael, though her given name is Smooter, and her married
name -- from a "just-outta-high-school" union she's
spent seven years forgetting -- is Perry. Whichever Melanie she
is, she's far removed from her roots in Pigeon Creek, Alabama,
and now designs fabulous clothes in fabulous New York. It's every
gal's dream, except that most gals, I presume, don't dream of
Patrick Dempsey. He plays Andrew, Melanie's fawning and moist-eyed
fiancé, and I really must apologize for chortling about
the waifishness of Stuart Townsend in last week's Trapped;
I hadn't yet seen Sweet Home Alabama, you see, and Dempsey
makes Townsend look like Lee Marvin.
Melanie hightails it back home
to serve her long-estranged husband -- Jake (Josh Lucas), a good
ol' boy partial to beer and bloodhounds -- with divorce papers,
which he won't sign at first, perhaps because the director told
him this would be a very expensive short film if he acquiesced
too soon. That director, incidentally, is one Andy Tennant, of
Ever After and Anna
and the King; he specializes in chick flicks in which
he casts a superpowered woman (Drew Barrymore, Jodie Foster,
and now Reese) and then -- as if this were necessary --
drains the life and color out of everyone and everything around
her. Fortunately, this doesn't work with Josh Lucas, a sly presence
in indie films (The
Deep End, American
Psycho) apparently now being groomed for hunk status.
Lucas has the wit to shrug this off; he has a way of seeming
amused by whatever the script (or Reese) tosses at him.
Sweet Home Alabama does nothing so crass as having Melanie
do fashion make-overs for all her old Alabama friends and family,
though it might've been a little more fun if it had done
something so crass. The movie is formulaic down to the floor,
and pads itself out unattractively with scenes like the one in
which Melanie gets drunk and insults everyone in a bar; it's
an ugly, wrongheaded scene, and it's followed by several scenes
wherein we have to watch Melanie going around apologizing. Surely
it's the screenwriter who should offer contrition, particularly
for giving us a movie in which the only black people we see are
either maids or a swishy gay designer. Andy Tennant, too, should
look sorrowful for coating the soundtrack with two bloodless
covers of the title song (one by Jewel) but never allowing the
Lynyrd Skynyrd original into the mix (gotta make room for Avril
Lavigne and No Doubt).
Everything leads to Melanie's
wedding with Andrew, whose mother is played by Candice Bergen
as a nail-tough broad (and mayor of New York!) who shows more
testosterone than her son. It's always good to see Fred Ward
and Mary Kay Place (as Melanie's stereotyped parents living in
a double-wide), and I was cheered, as always, by the presence
of Melanie Lynskey, the usually-overlooked other half of the
Heavenly Creatures duo (Kate Winslet gets all the press);
Lynskey, a New Zealander born and bred, does a more convincing
'Bama accent than does Witherspoon (who hails from Tennessee).
But everyone revolves around Melanie, just as the movie revolves
around Witherspoon. She deserves stardom -- hell, give her a
throne and tiara -- but she doesn't have to make it so easy for
herself. Like Melanie, Reese is in danger of forgetting her roots
-- the days when she was young and hungry and taking chances
in weird movies. It'd be a shame if she left that behind.
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