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Whatever Works (2009)
Release Date:
Friday, June 19, 2009
MPAA Rating:
PG-13
Rating Reason:
Sexual situations including dialogue, brief nude images and thematic material.
Genre:
Romantic comedy
Starring:
Larry David, Evan Rachel Wood, Ed Begley Jr., Patricia Clarkson, Henry Cavill, Kristen Johnston, Michael McKean
Written By:
Woody Allen
Director:
Woody Allen
Official Site:
Synopsis:
An eccentric New Yorker played by Larry David abandons his upper class life to lead a more bohemian existence. He meets a young girl from the south and her family and no two people seem to get along in the entanglements that follow.
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Whatever Works (2009) | Review
Giving Into Chance?
Elisabeth Leitch
"As you go through life it's a tough struggle and whatever works that doesn't hurt anybody is fine," says Allen of his concept for the movie and the various relationships which unfold inside of it. "However bizarre a romantic relationship may be: if it works, it works. And it doesn't have to be just about romantic relationships. It can be about one's occupations, or one's hobbies, or where one wants to live. &ellips; If some utterly unconventional set-up works for you, then there's nothing wrong with pursuing it." In a world in which many of us are so haunted by who we should be or what our lives should look like that we spend most of our lives being someone we are not or pursuing dreams or careers we don't even like, there are parts of Allen's logic that I get. In a culture in which we worship false perfection and celebrity, many of the examples we are given to follow simply have no value. With so many unique individuals wandering this earth, it makes sense that the relationships and career paths into which we might perfectly fit would also be equally unique. And sometimes, to ever find the true value in ourselves in the lives we lead, we do need to let go of false definitions of value and meaning to ever find anything true. But my problem with Whatever Works' sense of value is the notion that luck and chance have more to do with the identities and relationships the characters find than anything else. Sure, each of the characters do seem to find happiness as they step into the people and possibilities that "chance" sends their way. But less an inspiring reality, the idea that the greatest factor involved in the human ability to find lives of meaning, relationships of love, and identities of substance is luck is one that pretty much makes me want to do like Boris tries to do on numerous occasions and say goodbye to life a little early. I mean, as cool as it is to think I could stumble upon the man and job of my dreams just because I go to a certain restaurant for lunch tomorrow, so is it about the most depressing thing in the world to think I may never find the man of my dreams or the job of my dreams because I never seem to quite hit the right restaurant at the exact right time. Continue: 1 2 Copyright © 2009 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.
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