Join these authors on Facebook!

 
July 1st - July 31st     books 
contests   prizes

 

MonaVie

Drink It ~ Feel It ~ Share It

Change your life today!

 



Biography | Bookshelf | Guest Book | Home | Newsletter
Romantic Movies | Mystery & Suspense Movies
ReelTalk Radio - listen to Betty Jo's movie reviews!

 

Elizabethtown (Widescreen Edition)

Romance Heats Up Slowly in
Elizabethtown    

by Betty Jo Tucker

 

Buy this movie 
(these links will open a new window -
 to return to The Romance Club, simply close down the new window!)

DVD

 

 

Just the sight of Susan Sarandon tap dancing at a hilarious memorial for her character’s dead husband made Elizabethtown worth seeing for me. Too bad almost everything else about filmmaker Cameron Crowe’s latest movie misses the mark of greatness by a mere hair’s breadth. 

 

All the elements of a special film – including likeable characters, genuine humor, unexpected romance and matters of life and death -- seem poised to break free here. But they don’t always gel. Still, Crowe (Almost Famous) deserves credit for trying. Inspired by his own feelings when his father died, Crowe wanted to make the type of movie his dad liked best. “A movie that could blend tears and laughter. . .that was his favorite combo,” Crowe explains.

 

While Elizabethtown succeeds in evoking a few tears and gentle laughter, blending them causes the most problem for the talented writer/director. The film follows Drew, a young man (Orlando Bloom) on the brink of suicide because of a business fiasco, who receives news of this father’s death and must return to his dad’s hometown for the funeral. On the journey there, he meets Claire (Kirsten Dunst), a beautiful, ultra-optimistic airline attendant (Kirsten Dunst) who helps change his life forever.

 

Crowe obviously knows that although a death in the family causes grief and suffering, the loved-one’s relatives can be very funny on such occasions. I think every family must have an amusing funeral story. At our house, we still chuckle about Grandma complaining that Grandpa didn’t look anything like himself lying in his casket in the funeral home, only to find out she was looking at the wrong body. Unfortunately, tying the grief and the fun together requires a delicate process which sometimes goes awry in Elizabethtown  – case in point, Drew discovering an “expression he’s never seen before” on the face of his father’s corpse, a scene which comes across neither funny nor sad.          

 

Playing a romantic couple, Bloom (Kingdom of Heaven) and Dunst (The Cat’s Meow) look fabulous, and they display an appropriate low-key chemistry when they first meet, one that heats up considerably as they spend more time together. To assist Bloom in preparing for his role, Crowe advised him to study classic relationship movies like The Apartment and The Philadelphia Story. Bloom claims this homework helped him get into the spirit of the type of film Crowe likes to make. “Movies like that aren’t about the visual effects and explosions – they’re human stories about family, about life, about death,” he declares.         

 

As for Dunst, she certainly appears to enjoy working with Bloom. ““He’s not jaded at all,” she says. “He’s just so easy to be around because he’s a dork like me; neither of us had to try to be cool with each other. It was just so easy.”

 

Elizabethtown features much to admire. It’s an ambitious attempt by Crowe to create something artistic, meaningful and entertaining about bouncing back after failure and grief. Unfortunately, because he dedicated this film to his father, I think it was hard for Crowe to cut some of the scenes that needed trimming, such as Drew’s drawn-out road trip with his father’s ashes. And the wonderful background music sometimes takes over the film like a tail wagging the dog.

 

Speaking of music, Elizabethtown boasts one of the most delightful musical scenes of the year. Yes, you guessed it. It’s Susan Sarandon’s “Moon River” tap dance. Eat your heart out, Napoleon Dynamite.        

(Released by Paramount Pictures and rated “PG-13” for language and some sexual references.)


    

Buy this movie 
(these links will open a new window -
 to return to The Romance Club, simply close down the new window!)

DVD

                                                            

Biography | Bookshelf | Home | Newsletter | Betty Jo's Movie Reviews

 


Get 2 BOOKS
+ a mystery gift  from
 eHarlequin.com


 

AUTHORS


Karen Rose Smith | Fern Michaels | Lori Soard
Joy Nash | Christine Flynn | Lizzie T. Leaf
Betty Jo Tucker | Harry & Elizabeth Lawrence
Cherry Adair  | Anna Destefano | C.H. Admirand
Diana Rubino | Tammy L. Boulds | Sherrilyn Kenyon
Michelle Moran | Marianne Stephens |
Susan Krinard
Kate Huntington | Kathleen Givens | Heather Graham
Chris Marie Green | Erin Quinn | Laura Mills-Alcott  



 


Michele Scott | Nancy Means Wright
Shirley TallmanJoyce and Jim Lavene

 


  
Fern Michaels | Vicki Hinze


 

iTRC Radio!

Listen today
(high speed connection recommended)

To Play a Show: click on "Play MP3"          To Download a Show: right click, and "Save Target As" to desktop!
Click here to Subscribe and automatically receive our shows as they are released!           More Shows!

 

Sign up for our FREE NEWSLETTER!
and receive individual emails or the daily digest and be automatically entered into our monthly drawings. To subscribe, just send a blank email to:
   TRCreaders-subscribe@yahoogroups.com  



Calendar Previews Contests  News ♥  Author Services   Bookseller News

BOOK TALK RADIO
Much Ado About Books

MOVIES
Love Stories on Film
Mystery & Suspense Stories on Film
ReelTalk Radio

CLASSIC RADIO DRAMAS
Romance - Mystery - Horror - Comedy
Listen Now!

NEWSLETTERS
Reader Newsletter | Bookseller News

FOR READERS
Book Excerpts | Contests | Short Stories
Calendar | FREE Stuff

WRITERS
Writers Area | Writer Tips
E-Mail Us | PRIVACY POLICY

 


The Romance Club Home Page