As Good as It Gets

As Good as It Gets

My Best Friend's Wedding One of the best romantic comedies of the 1990s, My Best Friend's Wedding not only gave Julia Roberts a delightful vehicle for her crowd-pleasing comeback, but it further distinguished itself by avoiding the conventional plotting of the genre. Julia plays a prominent Chicago restaurant critic whose best friend (Dermot Mulroney) is a former lover from her college days with whom she'd made a binding pact: if neither of them were married by the age of 28, they'd marry each other. Just when they're about to reach the deadline of their agreement, Mulroney arrives in Chicago to introduce Roberts to his seemingly perfect fiancée (Cameron Diaz) and announce their wedding in just three days. That leaves the shocked Julia with just three short days to sabotage the wedding and marry the man she now realizes she's loved all along. With potential heartbreak waiting in the wings, she'll either get what she wants or pay the price for her selfish behavior, and Ronald Bass's cleverly constructed screenplay keeps us guessing to the very end. Rupert Everett scored rave reviews for his scene-stealing performance as Robert's gay friend who goes along with her scheming (but only so far), and even as she makes her character's needy desperation disarmingly appealing, Roberts wisely allows Diaz to capitalize on her charming time in the spotlight. As the romantic outcome remains uncertain, the viewer is held in a state of giddy suspense, and director P.J. Hogan pulls off some hilarious scenes (like a restaurant full of people singing the Dionne Warwick hit "I Say a Little Prayer") that could easily have fallen flat in the hands of a less talented filmmaker. It's no surprise that this was one of the box-office smashes of 1997. --Jeff Shannon Sleepless in Seattle The director and stars of 1998's You've Got Mail scored a breakthrough hit with this hugely popular romantic comedy from 1993, about a recently engaged woman (Meg Ryan) who hears the sad story of a grieving widower (Tom Hanks) on the radio and believes that they're destined to be together. She's single in New York, he lives in Seattle with a young son, but the cross-country attraction proves irresistible, and pretty soon Meg's on a westbound flight. What happens from there is ... well, you must have been living in a cave to have let this sweet-hearted comedy slip below your pop-cultural radar. There's little complexity or depth to writer-director Nora Ephron's cheesy tale of a romantic fait accompli, and more than a little contrivance to the subplots that threaten to keep Hanks and Ryan from actually meeting. But the purity of star chemistry here is hard to deny, and this may be the first film to indicate the more serious and sympathetic side of Hanks that is revealed in later roles. With its clever jokes about "chick movies" and repeated homage to the classic weeper An Affair to Remember, this may not be everybody's brand of amorous entertainment, but it's got an old-Hollywood charm that appeals to many a movie fan. --Jeff Shannon The Wedding Planner The good news is, yes, Jennifer Lopez can do comedy. In The Wedding Planner Lopez is Mary, a lovable woman who believes "those who can't do, teach. Those who can't wed, plan!" Her slapstick moments are lighthearted and she is spot-on as the controlling, compulsive-yet-sweet planner. The bad news is Lopez didn't get much of a vehicle in which to test drive her newfound comedic skills. Mary's life is her career. Planning other people's weddings takes all of her time, leaving no room for a love life of her own. Her only personal life is a Scrabble club, to which she and her father (Alex Rocco, whose wandering Italian accent is painful to listen to) belong. When a handsome young doctor (Matthew McConaughey) saves her from a collision with a runaway dumpster (really, it works), she is instantly wooed by his quiet charm. Too bad he's the fiancé of Mary's biggest client, Fran (played winningly by Bridgette Wilson-Sampras), the job that will launch Mary as a partner in her firm. The main problem with this film is that no one wants to hurt anyone else's feelings. Everyone is just so gosh-darn nice. In a subplot, Mary's father is trying to arrange her marriage to just the nicest Italian boy. Gee, he's sweet. Golly, Fran is nice. Is there ever a way out of this mess and to leave everyone smiling? Yet, there is a touch of old-fashioned romance to this wholesome film, which can only be described as "cute." And while things may unfold in a predictable manner, The Wedding Planner is still lighthearted fun of the sort that inspires dreamy romantic thoughts. --Jenny Brown As Good as It Gets For all of its conventional plotting about an obsessive-compulsive curmudgeon (Jack Nicholson) who improves his personality at the urging of his gay neighbor (Greg Kinnear) and a waitress (Helen Hunt) who inspires his best behavior, this is one of the sharpest Hollywood comedies of the 1990s. Nicholson could play his role in his sleep (the Oscar he won should have gone to Robert Duvall for The Apostle), but his mischievous persona is precisely necessary to give heart to his seemingly heartless character, who is of all things a successful romance novelist. As a single mom with a chronically asthmatic young son, Hunt gives the film its conscience and integrity (along with plenty of wry humor), and she also won an Oscar for her wonderful performance. Greg Kinnear had to settle for an Oscar nomination (while cowriter-director James L. Brooks was inexplicably snubbed by Oscar that year), but his work was also singled out in the film's near-unanimous chorus of critical praise. It's questionable whether a romance between Hunt and the much older Nicholson is entirely believable, but this movie's smart enough--and charmingly funny enough--to make it seem endearingly possible. --Jeff Shannon

Genre: Comedy, Drama, Romance
Director(s): James L. Brooks
Production: TriStar Pictures
  Won 2 Oscars. Another 35 wins & 49 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.7
Metacritic:
67
Rotten Tomatoes:
84%
R (Restricted)
Year:
1997
139
16,640 Views
BRACE YOURSELF FOR MELVIN
A comedy from the heart that goes for the throat.

Melvin Udall:
[to Carol Connelly] I'm hungry.

[He sees Carol's astonished look.]

Melvin Udall:
You've ruined my whole day. I haven't eaten.

Carol Connelly:
What are you doing here?

[Melvin ignores this question, instead answering a charge that he had imagined that Carol might have taken.]

Melvin Udall:
This is not a sexist thing. If you were a waiter, I'd be saying the -

Carol Connelly:
Are you totally gone? This is my private home.

Melvin Udall:
I'm trying to keep emotion out of this. Even though it's an important issue to me, and I have very strong feelings on the subject.

Carol Connelly:
What subject? That I wasn't there to take crap from you and bring you eggs? Do you have any control over how creepy you allow yourself to get?

Melvin Udall:
Yes, I do, as a matter of fact. And to prove it, I have not gotten personal, and you have. Why aren't you at work? You sick? You don't look sick. Just tired and bitter.

Carol Connelly:
My son is sick, okay?

[She crosses to the sink to dump the ice. Melvin takes a step inside.]

Melvin Udall:
What about your mother?

Carol Connelly:
How do you know about my mother?

Melvin Udall:
I hear you talking while I wait.

Spencer "Spence" Connelly:
[offscreen] Mom, I finished my juice.

Carol Connelly:
I'm sorry, honey. One sec.

Spencer "Spence" Connelly:
[offscreen] Mom.

[He walks into the room. Melvin is uncomfortable.]

Melvin Udall:
[to Spencer "Spence" Connelly] How ya doing?

[Spence just stares at Melvin, who becomes miffed.]

Melvin Udall:
You should answer someone when they speak to you.

[Carol eyes Melvin with disgust and disbelief.]

Carol Connelly:
I'm sorry, Melvin! That's it! I cannot handle you teaching my son manners!

[She pushes Melvin out the door and closes it in Melvin's face.]

Melvin Udall:
Ow!

Beverly Connelly:
You are not still writing that thank you note?

Carol Connelly:
I'm on my last page. How do you spell "conscience"?

Beverly Connelly:
C-o-n-s-c-i-e-n-c-e. Look, I got Sean from the bakery to come babysit so we could go out.

Carol Connelly:
I still don't feel safe leaving Spencer with someone. Could you spell that again, please?

Beverly Connelly:
Spencer's okay. You better finding something else to do with your free time. [to Sean] Sean, are you hungry?

Sean:
[offscreen] Yeah.

Beverly Connelly:
All right. We got pizza. Carol and I are going out. Sausage pepperoni. You wanna make this later for you and Spencer?

Sean:
[offscreen] Great.

Beverly Connelly:
[to Carol Connelly] We are going out like people do. If you can't feel good about this break and step out a little . . .

[She struts and pumps her arms.]

Beverly Connelly:
. . . then I - I think you ought to have Mr. Udall send you over a psychiatrist.

[Carol replies more emotionally than she intended.]

Carol Connelly:
I don't need one 'cause I know what's really going on here. I gotta finish this letter, or I'll go nuts.

Beverly Connelly:
Carol?

Carol Connelly:
This can't be right. Con-science?

[She breathes heavily, gets control, and stops herself on the brink of crying.]

Beverly Connelly:
Carol? What?

[She nods. Carol breaks down in tears.]

Carol Connelly:
It's very weird now not feeling that stupid panic feeling inside me all the time. Without that, I just start thinking about myself, and what good does that ever get anybody? Today, on the bus, there was this adorable couple, and I felt myself giving them a dirty look. I just had no idea everything was . . .

[She makes forceful hand gestures.]

Beverly Connelly:
Go ahead.

Carol Connelly:
. . . moving in the wrong direction. Away from a time when I remembered what it was like to have a man to anything . . . hold f***ing - sorry . . .

Beverly Connelly:
No, it's okay.

Carol Connelly:
. . . hands with, for Christ's sake. And I felt almost really bad that Dr. Bettes is married. Which is probably why I make Spencer hug me more than he wants to. The poor kid doesn't have enough problems. He has to make up for his mom not getting any. Who needs these thoughts?

Beverly Connelly:
So, what, are you saying that you're frustrated -

Carol Connelly:
Leave me be! Why are you doing this? What is it you want? I hope getting me thinking about everything that's wrong when all I want to do is not do that has some purpose. Really, Mom, what is it you want? What?

Beverly Connelly:
I want us to go out.

[There is a beat.]

Carol Connelly:
Okay.

Carol Connelly:
So, anything else?

Melvin Udall:
Yeah. I'm gonna give my queer neighbor a lift to Baltimore.

Carol Connelly:
Okay.

Melvin Udall:
Hey. What I did for you, it's, uh, working out?

[There is a breath.]

Carol Connelly:
What you did changed my life.

[She offers him the thank you note.]

Melvin Udall:
No, uh . . . no - no thank you note.

Carol Connelly:
Well, part of what I said in this entire history of my life, which you won't read, is that somehow, you have done more for my mother, my son, and me, than anyone else ever has, and . . .

[She opens up the letter and looks for a page.]

Carol Connelly:
. . . I'm just gonna read you this part of it. "And that makes you the most important, surprising, generous person I ever met in my life and that you're gonna be in our prayers, our daily prayers, forever."

Melvin Udall:
Lovely.

Carol Connelly:
I . . . I also wrote one part . . . I'm just gonna say I - I wrote I'm sorry. I . . . I was talking about I was sorry when I - when I got mad at you for - for when you came over, and you told my . . .

Melvin Udall:
Uh-huh.

Carol Connelly:
. . . son that he ought to answer back so I wrote that I was sorry about that.

[Melvin is wildly uncomfortable and wants to disappear, but Carol is getting into it, being emotionally moved by her own words.]

Carol Connelly:
And then I . . . I wrote I was sorry for busting you on that, and I'm sorry for busting in on you that night . . . when I said I was never . . . I was sorry, and I'm sorry for every time your food was cold and that you had to wait two seconds for a coffee filler, and I'm sorry for never spotting, right there at the table in the restaurant, the human being that had it in him to do this thing for us. I'll just - you know what? I'm just gonna start from the beginning. "I have not been able to express my gratefulness to you even as I look at the word 'grateful' now, it doesn't begin to tell you what I feel . . ."

[She finally notes Melvin's mood and pauses.]

Melvin Udall:
Uh, that's, uh, nice of you. Thank you.

Carol Connelly:
Thank you.

Melvin Udall:
Now, I want you to do something for me.

[Carol looks at Melvin for a very strange, long beat.]

Carol Connelly:
I'm sorry. Didn't I say, "What?" I thought I said, "What?" . . . What?

Melvin Udall:
I want you to go on this trip.

[Carol laughs.]

Carol Connelly:
No, sir.

Melvin Udall:
I can't do this without you. I'm afraid he might pull the stiff one eye on me. I need you to chaperone. Separate everything but cars. You said you like convertibles. Now, I'm on the hook.

Carol Connelly:
I'm sorry. "The stiff one eye"?

Melvin Udall:
Two days.

Carol Connelly:
I can't. I work.

Melvin Udall:
You get off when you want to.

Carol Connelly:
My son.

Melvin Udall:
Bettes said he's doing fine.

Carol Connelly:
Melvin, I'd rather not.

Melvin Udall:
What has that got to do with it?

Carol Connelly:
Funny, I thought it was a strong point.

Melvin Udall:
Write a note. Ain't she sweet? I need a hand, and where'd she go.

Carol Connelly:
Are you saying accepting your help obligates me?

Melvin Udall:
Is there any other way to see it?

Carol Connelly:
No.

Simon Bishop:
Well, I always painted. And my - my mother always encouraged it. I mean, she was really sort of - she was sort of fabulous about it actually . . . and she used to . . . you know, I was too young to think anything wrong with it, and she was - she was very natural. So, she used to pose nude for me . . . and I always thought, or I guess I assumed that my father knew about it.

Melvin Udall:
This stuff is pointless.

Carol Connelly:
Hey! Let him finish please.

Melvin Udall:
You like sad stories? You wanna hear mine?

Carol Connelly:
Stop! [to Simon] Go ahead. Really. Please don't let him stop you.

Simon Bishop:
Um, one day, he walked in, and he found us, and he just - he started screaming.

[Melvin speaks quickly.]

Melvin Udall:
My father didn't come out of his room for 11 years. He used to hit me on the hands with a yardstick if I made a mistake playing the piano. Huh?

Carol Connelly:
Go ahead, Simon. So, you said he came in your room, and he was yelling?

Simon Bishop:
Uh-huh.

Carol Connelly:
Please. Come on.

Simon Bishop:
Um, he was, uh, um . . .

Carol Connelly:
Come on.

Simon Bishop:
Yeah. I know. I mean, um, he was - I was - I remember I was defending my mother, and I - I was trying to, um, you know, make peace in the - the lamest way. I said . . .

[He laughs.]

Simon Bishop:
I said, "She's not naked. It's art."

[He and Carol laugh.]

Simon Bishop:
And he started hitting me. And he beat me unconscious. And he talked to me less and less after that. I mean, he - you know, he knew what I was before I did. And the morning that I left for college, he walked into my room, and he held out his hand, and - and it was filled with money. A big, sweaty wad of money. And he said, "I don't want you to ever come back." And I just grabbed him, and I hugged him, and he turned and walked out.

[Carol kisses her fingers and touches them to Simon's cheek.]

Carol Connelly:
Hey, we all have these terrible stories to get over. You -

Melvin Udall:
That's not true. Some of us have great stories. Pretty stories that take place at lakes with boats and friends and noodle salad. Just no one in this car. But, a lot of people, that's their story: good times, noodle salad. What makes it so hard is not that you had it bad, but that you're that pissed that so many others had it good.

Carol Connelly:
No! I don't think so.

Simon Bishop:
Not it at all, really.

Melvin Udall:
Not it at all, huh?

[Simon shakes his head.]

Melvin Udall:
Okay. Let's, uh, go to the hotel and, uh, tomorrow, you'll see if you can get another big wad of sweaty money out of his hand.

Carol Connelly:
You wanna dance?

Melvin Udall:
Well, I've been thinking about that since you brought it up before.

[Carol rises.]

Carol Connelly:
And?

Melvin Udall:
No. I - I don't get this place. They make me buy a new outfit, and they let you in with a house dress. I don't get it.

[He has no idea that he has insulted Carol. Sandbagged in extreme, she gets up, actually ready to leave.]

Melvin Udall:
What? W-wait. No. Wait. Why? Where you going? No. Why? I mean, I . . . uh, I didn't mean it that way. I mean, you gotta sit down. You can still give me the dirty look, just sit down and give it to me.

Carol Connelly:
Pay me a compliment, Melvin. I need one. Quick. You have no idea how much what you said hurt my feelings.

[Melvin, who is really pissed, mutters.]

Melvin Udall:
The monominute that someone gets that they need you, they threaten to walk out. It never fails.

Carol Connelly:
A compliment is something nice about somebody else. Now or never.

Melvin Udall:
Okay.

[He waves Carol down, and she sits.]

Carol Connelly:
And mean it.

Melvin Udall:
Can we order first?

[Carol thinks and then nods. The waiter is across the room. This does not stop Melvin, who calls out to the waiter.]

Melvin Udall:
Um, two hard shell crab dinners, pitcher of ice cold beer. [to Carol Connelly] Uh, baked or fries?

Carol Connelly:
Fries.

[Melvin does not hear Carol. She speaks louder.]

Carol Connelly:
Fries.

Melvin Udall:
Right.

[He calls to the waiter.]

Melvin Udall:
One baked, one fried.

[The waiter shouts back.]

Waiter:
I'll tell your waiter.

Melvin Udall:
What a waiter. [to Carol Connelly] Okay. Now, I got a real great compliment for you, and it's true.

Carol Connelly:
I'm so afraid you're about to say something awful.

Melvin Udall:
Don't be pessimistic. It's not your style. Okay. Here I go. Clearly a mistake. I've got this what? Ailment. My doctor, a shrink that I used to go to all the time, he says that in 50 or 60 percent of the cases, a pill really helps. I hate pills. Very dangerous thing, pills. "Hate", I'm using the word "hate" here about pills. "Hate". My compliment is that night when you came over and told me that you would never . . .

Carol Connelly:
Um.

Melvin Udall:
Um, all right, well, you were there. You know. You know what you said. Well, my compliment to you is the next morning, I started taking the pills.

[Carol is a little confused.]

Carol Connelly:
I don't quite get how that's a compliment for me.

Melvin Udall:
You make me want to be a better man.

Carol Connelly:
That's maybe the best compliment of my life.

Melvin Udall:
Well, maybe I overshot a little because I was aiming at just enough to keep you from walking out.

[Carol and Melvin laugh.]

Carol Connelly:
How's it going with those pills? Good, I hopahopahopa. Hm.

Melvin Udall:
It's - it's - it's - it's, uh, it's little by little. It's - it's - it's exhausting talking like this.

[He holds his head.]

Melvin Udall:
Exhausting.

[Carol moves to the chair next to Melvin. Carol sits very close, and Melvin tenses.]

Carol Connelly:
Do you ever let a romantic moment make you do something you know is stupid?

Melvin Udall:
Never.

Carol Connelly:
Here's the trouble with never.

[She kisses Melvin.] Note:
The line in bold was nominated for the AFI's 100 Years…100 Movie Quotes.


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