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Sweet November (2001)
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Nelson Moss (Reeves) is an upper echelon advertising executive addicted
to adrenaline and 80-hour work weeks, the kind of guy who has bathroom breaks scheduled in his PalmPilot and a cell phone
in the shower. In this week's version of a
"meet cute" he encounters Sara Deever (Theron) while they're both taking their
DMV license-renewal test his attempts to grill her for answers gets her thrown out
of the exam. As she's without transportation
until she can re-take the test in a month, she figures it's only fair to show up at
Nelson's door at 1:00 AM whenever she needs a ride. Sara
is Nelson's female doppelganger, she's as free-spirited and relaxed as he is anal, cruel
and withdrawn. She senses his hidden
unhappiness and makes a bold offer: Nelson should drop everything job, girlfriend,
swank apartment - and move in with her for a month. Why
- because she wants to help him. Surely all
he's missing is... the love of a good woman. And
this is an assignment that Sara has willingly taken on several times before. Nelson rejects her, but soon recants after he's
fired following a stormy meltdown during a presentation for a crucial client.
In a story built on such an implausible premise, a large portion of its
credibility depends on how genuine its characters' emotions appear. And this is where the film stumbles. Reeves has one facial expression: sheetrock. This can suffice when he's playing Neo in The Matrix or a back-country oaf in The Gift,
but here the situation calls for actors who can portray several relatively complex
emotions and the gradual transitions between them. Reeves
is quite simply overmatched. Charlize Theron
tries much harder but has been dressed up
like Carol Burnett's washerwoman and forced to chirp platitudes like "Look at that,
Nelson. It's life, it's just happening around
us all the time."
Kurt
Voelker's script (based on Herman Raucher's original) doesn't help much. It's larded with stock poignant situations that
leave little room for the characters to develop. The
film plays like an episode of TV's Dharma and Greg
stretched to feature length. Pat O'Connor's
direction is unremarkable, save for one of the most annoyingly edited flashback scenes in
recent memory.
Two supporting performances are of note.
Greg Germann transplants his Ally McBeal TV persona to the big screen perfectly
intact, giving casting directors little reason to use him in the future. But Jason Isaacs (The Patriot)
infuses his role as Sara's downstairs neighbor with intelligence and quiet wit despite
being saddled with a knee-jerk stereotypical scene. This
is San Francisco, so somebody's got to be a
transvestite, right?
It's been reported that post-production decisions shifted the film from
a PG-13 to an R rating, which might explain some of the story holes. But what remains of the R footage is used in a
regrettably crass fashion that largely undermines whatever residual sweetness the story
might otherwise have retained. Several scenes
of Sara and Nelson in bed stand in jarring counterpoint to the largely platonic
relationship shown in the rest of the film; they're totally out of place.
At one point in the proceedings, Nelson asks Sara how she selected the
duration of her periodic rehab relationships. She
replies that a month is "long enough to be meaningful, short enough to stay out of
trouble." Unfortunately, Sweet November is neither.
- Bob Aulert