Los Angeles Times

Science can’t help generic rom-com

- — Robert Abele

For the student bored by physics, a professor suddenly theorizing about the ups and downs of romance might have the potential to turn around a stuffy lecture. But the opposite doesn’t hold the same power in Spanish writer-director (and onetime Alejandro Amenabar collaborat­or) Mateo Gil’s “The Laws of Thermodyna­mics.”

It attempts to spruce up a generic romantic comedy about physics geek Manel (Vito Sanz) and his hot/cold affair with model/actress Elena (Berta Vázquez), by viewing it through the prism of laws-of-attraction science. The movie is presented as a documentar­y from Manel positing that the titular rules for all physical life explain our emotions and behavior. The gimmicky construct is complete with historical narration and scenes manipulate­d to shift and bend time.

Early on there’s a bit of charm to the metaphor, as in a dance floor scene in which Manel likens Elena’s effect on surroundin­g men to a solar system with rotating planets. But eventually Gil’s overly clever notion wears out its welcome, and that Manel and Elena are wispily drawn characters with predictabl­e arcs of collision, attraction, cooling and entropy becomes all too apparent.

Though sleekly photogenic in its depiction of cosmopolit­an Europeans in permanent romantic neurosis, “The Laws of Thermodyna­mics” is better in theory than fact. “The Laws of Thermodyna­mics.” In Spanish and English with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes. Playing: Streaming on Netflix.

 ?? Netf lix ?? JUAN BETANCOURT, left, Berta Vázquez and Vito Sanz grapple with entropy, attraction and more.
Netf lix JUAN BETANCOURT, left, Berta Vázquez and Vito Sanz grapple with entropy, attraction and more.

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