Times Colonist

Hathaway steals the show in boy band rom-com The Idea of You

- JAKE COYLE

In the warmly charming romcom The Idea of You, Anne Hathaway plays a 40-year-old divorcee and Silver Lake art gallery owner who, after taking her teenage daughter to Coachella, becomes romantical­ly involved with a 24-year-old heartthrob in the boy band August Moon. They first meet after she mistakes his trailer for the bathroom.

There are a few hundred things about this premise that might be farfetched, including the odds of finding love anywhere near the porta johns of a music festival. But one of them is not that a young star like Hayes Campbell ( Nicholas Galitzine ) would fall for a single mom like Solène (Hathaway).

Solène is stylish, unimpresse­d by Hayes’ celebrity and has bangs so perfect they look geneticall­y modified. And, most importantl­y, she’s Anne Hathaway. In the power dynamics of The Idea of You, Hayes may be a fictional pop star but Hathaway is a very real movie star. And you don’t forget it for a moment in Michael Showalter’s lightly appealing showcase of the actor at her resplenden­t best.

The Idea of You, which debuts Thursday on Prime Video, is full of all the kinds of contradict­ions that can make a rom-com work. The highly glamorous, megawatt-smiling Hathaway is playing a down-to-earth nobody. The showbiz veteran in the movie is played by Galitzine, a less well-known but up-andcoming British actor whose performanc­e in the movie is quite authentic. And even though the whole scenario is undeniably a glossy high-concept Hollywood fairy-tale, Showalter gives it enough texture that The Idea of You comes off more natural and sincere than you’d expect.

The only thing that really needs to make perfect sense in a movie like The Idea of You is the chemistry. The film, penned by Showalter and Jennifer Westfeldt from Robinne Lee’s bestseller, takes its time in the early scenes between Solène and Hayes — first at Coachella, then when he stops by her gallery — allowing their rapport to build convincing­ly, and giving each actor plenty of time to smoulder.

Once the steamy hotel-room encounters come in The Idea of You, the movie has, if not swept you away, then at least ushered you along on a European trip of sex and room service. At the same time, it stays faithful to its central mission of celebratin­g middle-aged womanhood. The relationsh­ip will eventually cause a social media firestorm, but its main pressure point is whether Solène can stick with Hayes after her ex-husband ( Reid Scott ) cheated on her. This is a fairy tale she deserves.

While Showalter (The Big Sick ) has long showed a great gift for juggling comedy and drama at once, The Idea of You leans more fully into wish-fulfilment romance. That can leave less to sustain the film, which has notably neutered some of the things that distinguis­hed the book.

The May-December romance has been shrunk a little. In the book, the singer is 20. Given that Galitzine is 29 and the 41-yearold Hathaway is no one’s idea of old, this is more like a JulySeptem­ber relationsh­ip.

There are surely more interestin­g and funnier places The Idea of You could have gone. But Hathaway and Galitzine are a good enough match that, for a couple hours, it’s easy to forget.

But the most convincing thing about The Idea of You? August Moon. The movie nails the look and sound of boy bands so well because it went straight to the source. The original songs in the film are by Savan Kotecha and Carl Falk, the producer-songwriter­s of, among other pop hits, What Makes You Beautiful, One Direction’s debut single.

The filmmakers have distanced the movie from any reallife resemblanc­es. But one thing is for sure: With August Moon following 4*Town of Turning Red, we are living in the golden age of the fictional boy band.

 ?? PRIME VIDEO ?? Nicholas Galitzine and Anne Hathaway in a scene from The Idea of You.
PRIME VIDEO Nicholas Galitzine and Anne Hathaway in a scene from The Idea of You.

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