Directed by: Jonas Elmer
Starring:
![]() Renee Zellweger and the scene stealing Siobhan Fallon. |
From Michael J. Fox in Doc Hollywood, to Reese Witherspoon in Sweet Home Alabama, to Diane Keaton in Baby Boom, Hollywood seems to love to throw a city person into a small town locale, in hopes that the fish out of water jokes will come fast and easy. Renee Zellwegger travels that familiar path in New in Town, but the laughs are scarce.
Corporate executive Lucy gets the job of spending the winter in Minnesota. Her Miami based corporation is transitioning a factory over to a new product. She is to see to the changes, as well as cut half of the work force. Lucy is given no back story. We learn nothing about her past.
In usual Hollywood tradition, all of the small town folk are quaint and, other than one rude waitress, very pleasant. Lucy is clueless about the climate and such things as a real fireplace. She thinks they all work with a switch. She falls for the local union representative Ted, even though they are at odds about the downsizing.
Siobhan Fallon as Blanche Gunderson steals every scene she is in. Granted, this movie is not that good, so that is not really much of a compliment. When Lucy first meets her, Lucy asks if she is her executive assistant. Blanche has no clue what that means, but informs her that she is her secretary. My favorite line involves Blanche keeping her tapioca recipe from her friend Trudy.
Ted is a widower, with a teenage daughter. Lucy and Ted share one interesting moment when they get into an argument at a dinner party. After Lucy tells Ted's daughter how she once saw Fergie in Miami, they get into a heated debate over how a girl should present herself. It is the only real moment in the entire film.
New in Town has several cute moments, but not too many actual funny ones. The movie ends on a very sappy note that I saw coming, but was hoping to avoid. If you have seen Doc Hollywood or Sweet Home Alabama or Baby Boom you already know how it ends.
![]() Harry Connick Jr. and Renee Zellwegger in New in Town. |
Sometimes sappy can be okay and in this instance I didn't mind it so overly much. Sure this is no great shakes of a movie, but the cast does its best with the limited material and no one embarrasses them self. It's not as if it's making a bunch of jokes that aren't funny, it's simply aiming more for sweet than hilarious and pretty much achieving its goal, even if sometimes it surpasses it and becomes too sweet for its own good.
One thing I'm surprised you didn't mention Eric, given how you've complained about Hollywood's treatment of religion in movies before, is how Blanche is shown to be a Christian. She mentions Jesus several times and at Christmas the whole town is shown to be singing a religious Christmas Carol. It's true that Lucy mocks her at first, but Blanche is shown to be a positive person who retains her belief throughout the movie.
We do actually learn a little bit about Lucy's past. Her father was a maintenance man in a factory who drilled into her a need to succeed. It's not a detailed past, but it does provide a motivation for her actions.
Some of Lucy's behavior at the beginning of the movie makes little sense. The script tries to make her seem out of her element, but I have a hard time believing that someone who reached her level of success wouldn't think to check the weather report before she went there and then dress accordingly. She also, at first, shows so little tact that again I have to question how someone with so limited personal skills could have risen to such a position of responsibility. Obviously they make her act that way for the "jokes", but since they're not that funny, it's hard to see why they bother.
Connick does an okay job in the thankless boyfriend part even if the beard doesn't do him any favors and he loses at least half his charm by dropping his southern accent. This is definitely a movie for the women though and the scenes between Zellwegger and Fallon are more meaningful than the scenes with Zellwegger and Connick.
True, you won't see much new here, but with low enough expectations there's some mild entertainment to be had.
Photos © Copyright Lionsgate (2009)