Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Someone Like You
View Larger Image

Someone Like You | Video On Demand

Starring: Ashley Judd, Greg Kinnear, Hugh Jackman, Marisa Tomei, Ellen Barkin
Directed By: Tony Goldwyn

Available:  This product is currently not available

Binding:  Video On Demand
Rating:  PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Run Time:  98 minutes
Studio:  20th Century Fox
Release Date:  September 28, 2009
Genre:  Comedy
Synopsis:  Jane Goodale has everything going for her. She's a producer on a popular daytime talk show and is in a hot romance with the show's dashing executive, Ray. When the relationship goes awry, Jane begins an extensive study of the male animal in an attempt to understand how and why Ray has so suddenly and inexplicably jilted her. Turning to Freud, Darwin, her own lovelorn friends, and a cabinet full of theories, Jane begins a safari of sorts to track down the strange lair of the human heart. Along the way, she puts her "studies" and romantic misadventures to use as a pseudonymous sex columnist - and becomes a sensation in the process.
Sales Rank:  10,966th


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 131 reviews)

an udder dudder? by H. Bala (Carson - hey, we have an IKEA store! - CA USA) 3 Stars
November 12, 2009
Even the movie title's bland, am I right? When it was first being pitched, a romantic comedy featuring Ashley Judd and Hugh Jackman probably sounded like a solid no-brainer. But, without a good script, it not quite falls apart, but it does leave one with a feeling of "Err. Huh. What?" In the end SOMEONE LIKE YOU is a nice light romantic comedy, nothing more, nothing less. Something maybe worth catching on cable TV, but I don't know that I'd shell out money for the DVD. I didn't mind watching it, but the flaws were right there in your face. Ashley Judd plays Jane, a producer on a daytime talk show and she thinks she'd met that special someone. Never mind that this guy (Greg Kinnear) already has a girlfriend. Jane and this guy hang out, hook up, get serious. But, on the verge of their moving in together into a new apartment, the guy breaks up with Jane. With Jane's old apartment already leased out to someone else, she takes up her co-worker Eddie's offer and becomes his platonic roomie in his spacious loft studio. And since Eddie (Jackman) is an unapologetic womanizer, Jane's regard for the opposite sex plummets even faster. One day, Jane reads an article in the paper and comes up with the "new cow" theory, this basically suggesting that a man always gets bored with banging the same woman and will always look for greener pastures. As a plot device to propel the story, it sucks. Instead of the lame pop psychology, a more apt theory is the one raised in When Harry Met Sally, which dictates that men and women can't be only friends. Ashley Judd is sweet and yearning, and cute when her character is throwing a tantrum, and that one scene in which she performs a cheerleading routine while dressed in only her sexy scanties, well, that goes a ways in redeeming the movie for me. Hugh Jackman, back then fresh off playing the brutish and smelly Wolverine in X-MEN, doesn't come off as brutish or smelly here. This was before he landed those other romantic lead roles (Kate & Leopold, Australia) and before he hosted the Oscars - and I think most of us missed his star turn in OKLAHOMA! - so SOMEONE LIKE YOU may've been the first time we've seen him be all casually charming and cosmopolitan. Anyway, the two leads do the best they can with the shoddy material they're given, and they're appealing enough and go well enough together that they just about overcome a weak and lifeless plot. The supporting cast is good, and I can never get enough of Ellen Barkin and Marisa Tomei. Greg Kinnear is really excellent at playing the quietly sleazy part. I like that Ashley Judd doesn't come off as too much of a weepy victim. But then she does get obsessed with drawing parallels between men and the bovine kingdom. She ends up publishing an article regarding her "studies" under the pseudonym of a much older woman. The kicker is that this article takes off and the mysterious author then becomes a much-in-demand guest star for the talk show circuit. It's dang uninvolving, the way this whole thing plays out, and the movie loses even more points for utilizing this plot device to resolve everything. The biggest flaw, though, is that the romance between the two leads comes out of nowhere. The film really could've done with more key moments to establish and develop Jane and Eddie's relationship. For most of the movie, Jane despises Eddie for his hound dog behavior, and Eddie just seems to cruise along his own merry way, bopping chicks left and right and not demonstrating one whiff of romantic interest for Jane. Then, late in the flick, Jane realizes that she loves him, and vicey-versy. It's a heck of a leap, and there's nothing truly suggested in Eddie's character that would indicate he's become a one-woman dude. I do like the switcheroo aspect in that Kinnear's character is regarded initially as the sensitive, thoughtful guy only for him to turn out to be a weasely scuzzbucket. And then there's Jackman's Eddie, on the surface a shallow one-night-stand kind of cat but who does have a chivalrous side. And did I mention Ashley Judd in her undies jumping up and down doing a cheer? It's what makes this fluffy film relevant to me. Heck, I may end up buying the DVD after all.

The new cow theory! by Medusa (Troy, MI) 4 Stars
October 20, 2009
Broken hearted Jane develops her "new cow theory" about men; meaning that a man prefers being with a new woman and will always dump the old one. Through the funny details of the movie and with friends' help (I won't ruin the pleasure of you finding out for yourself, by providing more details), Jane faces her pain and finds out that she can still find true love, the only analgesic for heartache. The idea of starting over and admitting that not all men are faulty is very refreshing. After all, we women are the delusional ones who insist on pretending that the frog we're kissing is a knight and we place him on a white horse, then we act shocked when we find out he is still a frog. The theme of the movie alone makes up for the cheesy performance and deserves 3 stars. Admittedly though, I am a shallow woman, and for the raw pleasure of seeing Hugh Jackman with his shirt off (even though he still looked great with his shirt on), I changed it to 4 stars.

DVD by Candy (California) 5 Stars
September 14, 2009
Quick shipment, great price. Would purchase other movies in the future. He loved the movie...

Have a Heart by Book Lover (Vermont) 4 Stars
September 10, 2009
If you don't like this movie, you have no heart. Ashley Judd is simply adorable. If you can't accept the fact that meeting the right person is all about timing, you know nothing about life.

HEART WARMING by David R. Bush 5 Stars
May 22, 2009
from the begining i was rooting for eddie, i know people who are like eddie (ladies man, kind of shallow). but who are basically very lonely and are afraid of entering into a long lasting relationship. you just know it's going to work out for them. good flick.

SIMILAR PRODUCTS


Scoop

Scoop
Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Hugh Jackman, Woody Allen
Directed By: Woody Allen
Also With: Woody Allen (Writer), Stephen Tenenbaum (Producer)



New In Town

New In Town
Starring: Renee Zellweger, Harry Connick Jr., Siobhan Fallon, J.K. Simmons, Mike O'Brien
Directed By: Jonas Elmer
Also With: Paul Brooks (Producer), Tracey E. Edmonds (Producer), Bruce Wayne Gillies (Producer), Phyllis Laing (Producer), Jeff Levine (Producer), Andrew Paquin (Producer), Peter Safran (Producer), Jonathan Shore (Producer), Darryl Taja (Producer), Dylan Tarason (Producer)



Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her

Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her
Starring: Glen Close, Cameron Diaz, Calista Flochart, Kathy Baker, Amy Brenneman
Directed By: Rodrigo Garcia
Also With: Rodrigo Garcia (Writer), Lisa Lindstrom (Producer), Marsha Oglesby (Producer), Jon Avnet (Producer)



Ghosts of Girlfriends Past

Ghosts of Girlfriends Past
Starring: Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Garner, Michael Douglas, Emma Stone, Breckin Meyer
Directed By: Mark Waters
Also With: Samuel J. Brown (Producer), Brad Epstein (Producer), Jonathan Shestack (Producer), Jessica Tuchinsky (Producer), Marcus Viscidi (Producer)



He's Just Not That Into You

He's Just Not That Into You
Starring: Morgan Lily, Michelle Carmichael, Trenton Rogers, Kristen Faye Hunter, Sabrina Revelle
Directed By: Ken Kwapis
Also With: Drew Barrymore (Producer), Michael Beugg (Producer), Michael Disco (Producer), Toby Emmerich (Producer), Nancy Juvonen (Producer), Gwenn Stroman (Producer), Michele Weiss (Producer)



© 2009 BrightSurf.com