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Definitely, Maybe

 
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Definitely, Maybe

  • Director: Adam Brooks
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Romantic Comedy
  • Themes: Fathers and Daughters, Breakups and Divorces
  • Main Cast: Ryan Reynolds, Isla Fisher, Derek Luke, Abigail Breslin, Elizabeth Banks
  • Release Year: 2008
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 111 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

A political consultant in the midst of a bitter divorce attempts to delicately divulge the truth about his past relationships to his curious young daughter, who simply won't stop asking questions until she's satisfied with all the answers. Ten-year-old Maya (Abigail Breslin) is heartbroken to see her parents splitting up, but she's determined to find out precisely how it was that mom and dad came together in the first place. When Maya starts questioning her father Will (Ryan Reynolds) about his life before marriage, dad's memories soon drift back to the time when, as a naïve Wisconsin native and aspiring politician hoping to work on the presidential election, he first arrived in New York City. As Will gradually became savvy to the ways of the big city, he gradually developed romantic relationships with three very different women: Emily (Elizabeth Banks) was the girl-next-door that he could always depend on, apolitical April (Isla Fisher) was the best friend and confidante who was always there to listen, and free-spirited journalist Summer (Rachel Weisz) was both beautiful and ambitious. In order to prevent his perceptive little girl from predicting the outcome before his story is told, Will carefully changes the names of his three romantic interests, creating a hopelessly romantic puzzle that highlights both the joys and hardships of true love. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

In subject matter alone, Definitely, Maybe is a lot like "How I Met Your Mother: The Movie." A cleverly structured story told by a father, in which he challenges his daughter to identify her mother from among three different love interests, would be more than enough to sustain a good date movie released just in time for Valentine's Day. Yet writer-director Adam Brooks isn't content with something so conventional. In fact, he's also managed to make Definitely, Maybe a period piece involving the presidency of Bill Clinton. Going well beyond expectations, Brooks uses the politician's tumultuous career as a metaphor for how the bloom comes off the rose in any courtship, making Clinton a narrative touchpoint -- from fresh-faced candidate to weary veteran strung up by his own semantics. It's an apt metaphor, as Will Hayes (Ryan Reynolds) is divorcing his wife, meaning the story within the story will have an unhappy ending. If this sounds too ambitious or a bit of a bummer, that's underestimating Brooks' bright writing and finesse with his attractive and charming cast. The role of romantic leading man suits Reynolds just fine; in fact, the actor seems relieved to abandon the over-the-top schtick of his past roles. Whether Will's in the arms of April (Isla Fisher), Emily (Elizabeth Banks), or Summer (Rachel Weisz), the exchanges are lively and funny. What's more, Brooks does a decent job creating suspense over the identities of both his wife and his true love. Most viewers will pick up on where the clues point -- conventionally structured as those clues must be -- but that doesn't make the journey any less enjoyable. Fisher, Banks, and Weisz see to that, with a little help from a precocious Abigail Breslin as Will's daughter, and an acerbic Kevin Kline as a boozy college professor. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Rachel Weisz - Summer Hartley; Adam Ferrara - Gareth; Annie Parisse - Anne; Liane Balaban - Kelly; Nestor Serrano - Arthur Robredo; Kevin Corrigan - Rafael; Jaime Tirelli - Simon; Kevin Kline - Roth Hampton

Credit

Peter Rogness - Art Director, Laura Rosenthal - Casting, Ali Farrell - Casting, Gary Jones - Costume Designer, Tim Bird - First Assistant Director, Adam Brooks - Director, Christopher Goode - Second Unit Director, Peter Teschner - Editor, Kerry Orent - Executive Producer, Liza Chasin - Executive Producer, Bobby Cohen - Executive Producer, Clint Mansell - Composer (Music Score), Nick Angel - Musical Direction/Supervision, Stephanie Carroll - Production Designer, Florian Ballhaus - Cinematographer, Tim Bevan - Producer, Eric Fellner - Producer, Michael Barosky - Sound/Sound Designer, Adam Brooks - Screenwriter, Randall Balsmeyer - Visual Effects Supervisor, Dominick Tavella - Re-Recording Mixer, Robert Hein - Supervising Sound Editor, Big Film Design - Visual Effects, Ellen Christiansen - Set Decorator, Kerry Orent - Co-Executive Producer

Similar Movies

The Story of Us; Irreconcilable Differences; America's Sweethearts; Bye Bye, Love
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Definitely, Maybe

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Adam Brooks
Produced by Tim Bevan
Eric Fellner
Written by Adam Brooks
Starring Ryan Reynolds
Isla Fisher
Derek Luke
Abigail Breslin
Elizabeth Banks
Rachel Weisz
Music by Clint Mansell
Cinematography Florian Ballhaus
Studio StudioCanal
Working Title Films
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) February 14, 2008
Running time 112 min.
Country UK
USA
France
Language English
Budget $7 million
Gross revenue $54,918,573

Definitely, Maybe is a 2008 romantic comedy film directed by Adam Brooks, and starring Ryan Reynolds, Isla Fisher, Rachel Weisz, Elizabeth Banks, and Abigail Breslin.

Contents

Plot

Will Hayes (Ryan Reynolds) is a 38-year-old father who is in the midst of a divorce. His 10-year-old daughter Maya (Abigail Breslin) lives with her mother but is with him twice a week. On one of these occasions she questions him about his life before marriage. After her first sex-ed class, Maya first asks and then insists on hearing the story of how her parents met and decided to get married. Will gives in, but decides to change the names and some of the facts relating to the various love affairs of his youth, thereby creating a love mystery; Maya is left guessing which of the women will turn out to be her mom. The story he tells Maya is depicted in long flashbacks. From time to time the film switches back to the present, where Maya comments and asks questions.

The story begins in 1992, where Will, a starry-eyed aspiring politician, moves away from [Wisconsin] and his college sweetheart, Emily (Elizabeth Banks) to New York to work on the Clinton campaign. She gives him a closed packet and asks him to give it to her friend Summer Hartley (Rachel Weisz), an aspiring journalist. In New York, he meets April (Isla Fisher), the copy girl for the campaign. Before bringing the packet to Summer, Will opens it- it is Summer's diary. Encouraged by his roommate Russell (Derek Luke), he reads it, and comes across pages describing a love affair between Emily and Summer. He visits Summer to bring the diary, and meets her roommate and sometimes-lover, her college professor, a famous writer named Hampton Roth (Kevin Kline). When Will leaves Summer kisses him, leaving Will shocked and confused.

Will and April have a chance meeting outside work, where Will reveals he is going to propose to Emily. When Will practices a proposal to Emily on April, she is taken aback by Will's words, and replies, "Definitely, maybe." They go back to her apartment, where April has multiple copies of Jane Eyre in her collection, explaining that her father gave her a copy with an inscription in the front shortly before he died, and the book was later lost. She has spent years buying copies of Jane Eyre from secondhand stores, hoping to find the copy her father gave her. April talks about her dreams to travel around the world, which she finds herself unable to do because of her current relationship with someone she rarely sees. When Will suggests she break up with her boyfriend to fulfill her desires, the two eventually share a kiss, with Will leaving quickly and berating himself.

Emily visits New York, and Will proposes in Central Park (first by recounting the story of his parents' engagement, and then by going through the words he said to April), but Emily turns him down and confesses she slept with Will's former roommate in Wisconsin, Charlie. Will is heartbroken and sad. Time goes by, Bill Clinton becomes the president of the United States, and Will and Russell start their own consulting firm. Their biggest client is Arthur Robredo (Nestor Serrano), their former employer on the Clinton campaign who is running to be Governor of New York. April travels the world like she wanted, and she and Will become pen-pals. Eventually, with the encouragement of Roth, Will and Summer become romantically involved. In the meantime April returns from her travels as she realized that the man she truly loves is Will. However she meets him as he's buying the engagement ring for Summer. April is heartbroken, but at the time Will doesn't notice it. Will and Summer's relationship ends when Summer writes an unfavorable story about Robredo, leading to Robredo's defeat and damaging Will's career and friendship with Russell.

Will becomes disillusioned about his choice of profession when Bill Clinton is implicated in the Monica Lewinsky scandal. He hates his job, and starts to drink heavily after finding out that April is dating a new guy. In a drunken rant, he confesses romantic feelings to her, but in the process, ends up having a fight with her, telling her to "go to life-rehab". However, it may be because of these words that April returns to school. Some time after the fight, while walking the streets of New York, Will finds the copy of Jane Eyre that April's father gave her. He goes to give it to her, but decides against it when he meets her boyfriend Kevin, with whom she is living. Summer and Will bump into each other while he is at a cafe, and Summer, who is now pregnant, invites him to a party.

Maya gets upset about the possibility of Summer being her mother and Will not being her natural father. However, it is revealed that Emily also attends the party, as she now lives in New York. Eventually, she and Will start up another relationship, and Emily turns out to be Maya's mother and Will's ex-wife, as Maya correctly guesses. Will explains to Maya that the happy ending all along was Maya and they share a hug and part ways. At home, Will signs the divorce papers served to him and unpacks his things moved from the previous house. By accident he sees the book he wanted to give April years ago and decides to visit her at her workplace, Amnesty International. After learning that she is now single again, he gives her the book, but when she finds out that he was holding on to it rather than giving it to her immediately, she becomes angry and asks him to leave her office.

Maya is happy that she figured out the story, but also realizes that her father still loves April, as even though Will changed the names of Emily (Sarah in real life), and Summer (Natasha in real life), he did not change April's name. Encouraged by Maya, who wants her father to be happy, Maya and Will go to April's apartment. Though April refuses to open the door at first, she hears Maya demand that Will tell April the story exactly as he told it to her. April still doesn't emerge, but as they turn to go back home, she comes outside. Will confesses to April that he held on to the copy of Jane Eyre because it was the only thing he had left of her. As the three enter into April's building, April springs into Will's arms and kisses him.

Cast

Trivia

Critical reception

Definitely, Maybe received generally positive reviews from critics. As of June 20, 2008, the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 73% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 102 reviews.[1] Metacritic reported the film had an average score of 59 out of 100, based on 30 reviews.[2]

Box office performance

In its opening weekend, the film grossed $9.7 million in 2,204 theaters in the United States and Canada, ranking #5 at the box office.[3] As of September 28, 2008, the film has grossed $54,918,573 worldwide.[4]

Release

DVD release

The film was released on DVD June 24, 2008. The DVD featured a widescreen transfer, deleted scenes, a short featurette, and a commentary track by the director Adam Brooks and lead actor Ryan Reynolds.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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