Lethbridge Herald

HARDLY ‘UNFORGETTA­BLE’

NOTHING CLEVER ABOUT KATHERINE HEIGL FILM

- Jocelyn Noveck

True story: Right after the final line of “Unforgetta­ble” was uttered, I felt a sudden stinging on the side of my face. Someone in a nearby row at the multiplex had thrown a roasted peanut toward the screen, in what I can only assume was frustratio­n or scorn, and it landed on me.

That peanut, I have to say, was the only unforgetta­ble thing about “Unforgetta­ble,” a truly uneasy mishmash of a movie, in which apparent attempts at addressing serious social themes — there’s a domestic violence subplot — dissolve into total camp. Which one can’t really enjoy, because it doesn’t seem intentiona­l.

The shame is that Rosario Dawson gives an earnest, sympatheti­c, even moving performanc­e as the victimized character. In contrast, none of her castmates — including Katherine Heigl, trying vainly to find meaning in a ridiculous­ly written part — seem authentic. Somebody didn’t get the memo, but who?

In plot setup only, “Unforgetta­ble” shares something with the recent wonderful thriller “Get Out” — both involve sympatheti­c characters of colour invited into their romantic partner’s lilywhite world, where, let’s just say, things do not go as planned.

From there, “Get Out” developed into one of the cleverest films in a generation. There’s nothing clever about “Unforgetta­ble,” unless you can find something sharp — no pun intended — about two sexy women hissing at each other over a fireplace poker. (Many of us might find that depressing.)

Dawson is Julia Banks, a woman trying to escape a troubled past. She quits her job, leaves her supportive BFF behind and heads to Southern California, where her new fiance, David, awaits (Geoff Stults, doing generic handsome guy and nothing more).

Things go south from the start. Julia’s attempts to bond with David’s young daughter, Lily, are thwarted by his highstrung, resentful ex-wife, Tessa (Heigl.)

Although Tessa and David have been apart for a few years, Tessa cannot come to terms with the split, and seeing a woman move in with David sends her hurtling straight toward the deep end.

Denise Di Novi, a veteran producer making her directoria­l debut here, seems to have had higher aspiration­s than pure camp, but she and screenwrit­er Christina Hodson don’t help matters (or help Heigl) by making Tessa such a onedimensi­onal, cartoonish shrew. In an early scene, Tessa, whose lips are fire-engine red and whose hair is white-blonde and perfectly straight, combs her daughter’s hair and says, “Now you’re perfect, just like Mommy.”

Much of her dialogue is similarly obvious and leaden. To show us she misses her husband, the film simply has Tessa watching her wedding video, tears pouring down her face.

Or asking her daughter: “Do you miss when Daddy and Mommy lived together?” Maybe Tessa has inherited this lack of subtlety from her mother — poor Cheryl Ladd’s role here is even less nuanced.

Once Tessa gets going, she utilizes every weapon in her arsenal to make Julia’s life hell. This includes setting up a fake Facebook account and engaging a shady character from Julia’s past. It’s here where the domestic violence thread comes in, and, well, sorry, but for most of us, this is not a subject that we want to laugh about in any way, shape or form. So if the filmmakers wanted us to laugh — and by the end, it sure seems like they do — well, maybe that theme wasn’t a great choice. More likely: we’re not supposed to be laughing.

But eventually, everything feels so out of whack that nervous laughter is the only solution. Or maybe throwing a peanut? “Unforgetta­ble,” a Warner Bros. release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America “for sexual content, violence, some language, and brief partial nudity.” Running time: 100 minutes. One star out of four.

 ?? Associated Press photos ?? This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Katherine Heigle, from left, Isabella Kai Rice and Rosario Dawson in a scene from “Unforgetta­ble.”
Associated Press photos This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Katherine Heigle, from left, Isabella Kai Rice and Rosario Dawson in a scene from “Unforgetta­ble.”
 ??  ?? This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Geoff Stults, left, and Isabella Kai Rice in a scene from “Unforgetta­ble.”
This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Geoff Stults, left, and Isabella Kai Rice in a scene from “Unforgetta­ble.”

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