Gulf News

Why you should watch ‘Set It Up’

This rom-com is wildly predictabl­e and a little cheesy but eminently enjoyable all the same

- By Bethonie Butler

At first glance, Set It Up — Netflix’s original movie about two overworked assistants who scheme to pair up their demanding bosses — seems like yet another cheesy romantic comedy. And in some ways, it is.

It’s also one of the best movies on Netflix (or anywhere else) right now.

If you’re a Netflix subscriber, chances are you’ve seen a promo for Set It Up, which follows Harper (Zoey Deutch) and Charlie (Glen Powell) as they try to get their high-powered bosses (Lucy Liu and Taye Diggs, respective­ly) to date each other. Liu plays Kirsten, a successful ESPN sports reporter running a digital start-up; Diggs’s Rick is a venture capitalist and kind of a jerk. You can probably guess what happens next, and that’s totally OK because the movie is just delightful.

If that’s not enough to convince you, here are a few other facts to know about

Set It Up, and why you should watch it. 1. Set It Up embraces romantic comedy traditions.

The plot follows the rom-com formula to a T, and that’s a large part of why it

works. Charlie and Harper are trying to set up their bosses, which inevitably means there will be a confrontat­ion about their scheming in the end.

So, there’s tension waiting for Kirsten and Rick to figure out what their assistants have been up to, and there’s tension waiting for Charlie and Harper to realise the inevitable, and then to act on it — or so we hope.

2. Deutch and Powell have great chemistry.

Liu and Diggs are the film’s marquee names, but Powell and Deutch are the true leads. From the moment Harper and Charlie meet while trying to procure dinner for their impossibly picky charges at the end of a very long day, you want to root for them, both romantical­ly and profession­ally. Which brings us to...

3. It treats millennial­s (and their careers) with respect.

Harper and Charlie are admittedly selfish in wanting to set Kirsten and Rick up, since less time managing their bosses’ calendars means they’ll be free to live their own lives a bit. But it’s also spurred by a desire to take charge of their own careers. “I don’t need to be free, I need to be promoted,” Charlie tells Harper. 4. Set It Up features great supporting characters.

To its credit, Set It Up doesn’t devote too much time to sidekicks. But it does allow for a few memorable supporting performanc­es. Tituss Burgess (Unbreakabl­e Kimmy Schmidt) brings his trademark wackiness to his role as Creepy Tim, the elevator operator in the building where Harper and Charlie work.

Meredith Hagner, who has mastered the clueless millennial character in TV shows such as Search Party and Younger, plays Harper’s roommate, Becca, who makes a sentimenta­l engagement speech that ultimately leads Harper to consider the moral dilemma of setting up Kirsten and Rick. It goes something like this: A slightly inebriated Harper realises that Kirsten and Rick don’t have what she calls an “and yet.” “That ... ‘love despite’ thing when there are ... all these reasons it shouldn’t work out, but they don’t care,” she tells Charlie. “Like Romeo and Juliet. We’re mortal enemies. And yet.”

Set It Up is kind of like that. It’s wildly predictabl­e and a little cheesy. And yet, it’s an absolute gem of a movie that, yes, you really should watch.

 ?? Photos courtesy of Netflix ?? Zoey Deutch aand Glen Powell in ‘Set It Up.
Photos courtesy of Netflix Zoey Deutch aand Glen Powell in ‘Set It Up.
 ??  ?? Deutch and Lucy Liu.
Deutch and Lucy Liu.

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