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Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008)
Release Date:
Friday, April 18, 2008
MPAA Rating:
R
Rating Reason:
For sexual content, language and some graphic nudity
Genre:
Comedy, Romance
Starring:
Jason Segel, Kristen Bell, Mila Kunis, Russell Brand, Bill Hader, Kala Alexander
Written By:
Jason Segel, Judd Apatow
Director:
Nick Stoller
Official Site:
Synopsis:
From the producers of "The 40-Year-Old Virgin" and "Knocked Up" comes a comic look at one guy's arduous quest to grow up and get over the heartbreak of being dumped -- if he can only make himself start "Forgetting Sarah Marshall."
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Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008) | Review
Funny or Stupid?
Elisabeth Leitch
If you don't know the background of Forgetting Sarah Marshall, it goes something like this: Sarah Marshall (Kristen Bell) is the star of a hit crime drama. Peter Bretter (Jason Segel), the show's composer, is her boyfriend of six years. Within the first ten minutes of the movie, she breaks up with him. Within the next twenty, he proves himself completely unable to deal with this new development. He goes to a resort in Oahu that Sarah had told him about to try to get over her once and for all. As luck would have it, she is at the same resort with her new rocker boyfriend Aldous (Russell Brand). And with a cute hotel receptionist (Mila Kunis), a stoner surf instructor (Paul Rudd), and a few other unique hotel guests and employees in tow, Peter's task of forgetting Sarah Marshall takes off. Don't get me wrong. Forgetting Sarah Marshall isn't horrible. It does have some great lines and a few scenes that remind me of the clever and realistic humor I loved in 40-Year-Old and Knocked Up. I will personally be on the lookout for a chance to use the line, "It's like the Sopranos. It's over. Find a new show." Although most of the characters in the movie wear thin after one funny scene or two, the unashamedly self-absorbed Aldous did keep me laughing through the end. And the fact that the movie enjoys making fun of some of the ridiculousness within its own creative machine did make me smile. Although the movie's storyline is fairly weak and fails to engage the ins and outs of relationships anywhere near as well as 40-Year-Old or Knocked Up, it still hits on a few points that ring true. Moving on past a breakup is hard to do. Sometimes breakups leave us so far away from where we were before, we have no idea how to get back. Other times the relationship that has ended has become so much a part of our life, we have no idea how to move forward afterwards. And as much as we can often find ourselves categorizing recent breakups as either completely justified or completely unjustified, most relationships have both legitimate reasons why they were good and reasons why they were not working out. One of my favorite scenes is one involving Sarah's habit of buying clothing for her boyfriends. As much as I have to say that many men do benefit from the fashion assistance of their girlfriends, sometimes the trend-based fashion choices of us women can be hilarious. And although I had never stopped to think about it before, Sarah Marshall made me see that small things like wearing the goofy clothes we buy them and carrying our purses can be acts of love that us women should recognize and appreciate in the men we date. Continue: 1 2 Copyright © 2008 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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