Doesn’t have the quilted complexity of Allen’s best work, but unfortunately that’s nothing radically different from what we’ve recently seen from the esteemed writer-director.
Melinda and Melinda (2005)
Tomatometer
How does the Tomatometer work ![]()
Reviews Counted:150
Fresh:80
Rotten:70
Average Rating:5.8/10
Consensus: Woody Allen's uneven Melinda and Melinda fails to find neither comedy nor pathos in what seems like a rehash of his previous themes.
Runtime: 1 hr 40 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $3,727,614
Synopsis: Woody Allen mixes the tragic with the comic in MELINDA AND MELINDA, a delightful, intelligent look at two versions of the same story. After hearing a tale about a quirky woman who walks in... Woody Allen mixes the tragic with the comic in MELINDA AND MELINDA, a delightful, intelligent look at two versions of the same story. After hearing a tale about a quirky woman who walks in unexpectedly on a dinner party in an apartment in New York City, Sy (Wallace Shawn) expands it into a romantic comedy, while Max (Larry Pine) turns it into an urban tragedy. Allen intercuts between the two retellings, intermingling cause and effect, love and romance, failure and success, as Melinda creates havoc in both fictional worlds. Each story has its own cast: the comedy features Will Ferrell, Amanda Peet, and Josh Brolin; the tragedy stars Chloe Sevigny, Jonny Lee Miller, and Chiwetel Ejiofor. Radha Mitchell is the only repeat actor, playing both Melindas, and she does a tremendous job. Interestingly, the comic section is not a straight laughfest, like Allen's SLEEPERS, ANNIE HALL, or BULLETS OVER BROADWAY, and the more serious part is not nearly as dour as INTERIORS or ANOTHER WOMAN. Instead, Allen, who has been criticized by critics and fans alike for not making more funny films, has created two parallel universes that each combines aspects of comedy and tragedy, resulting in a wonderful, insightful drama. [More]
Starring: Wallace Shawn, Larry Pine, Radha Mitchell, Jonny Lee Miller
Starring: Wallace Shawn, Larry Pine, Radha Mitchell, Jonny Lee Miller, Chloë Sevigny, Will Ferrell, Chjwetel Ejiofor, Amanda Peet, Steve Carell, Shalom Harlow, Vanessa Shaw, Josh Brolin
Director: Woody Allen
Director: Woody Allen
Screenwriter: Andy Borowitz, Woody Allen
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
Reviews for Melinda and Melinda
Faced with the choice between oh-so-slight comedy or trashy melodrama, some viewers might just prefer a different film.
Melinda and Melinda, like its title characters, seems to go nowhere in particular.
Engaging, well performed, cleverly constructed and both tragic and comic as befits its objectives.
It's Mitchell's movie all the way and the young actress makes the most of her opportunity.
The details are so complex and interconnected, it becomes more comfortable to let it all wash over you and simply appreciate the passing pleasures.
The tragedy is not particularly tragic except in rote recitation of what came before, the comedy not particularly comic.
The dual stories in Melinda and Melinda never manage to be cohesive or meaningful enough to register as purely comic or tragic.
What makes Melinda and Melinda particularly fun -- despite a creakiness in many of the jokes -- is that Allen seems to be thinking about his own penchant for merging comedy with tragedy.
The movie's problem is a failure of contrast arising from comic material that's not funny and tragic material not very moving.
An engaging little picture highlighted by an ingenious premise and a knockout lead performance.
A bright, jaunty comedy in a jazz tempo that mirrors two opposing sides of a single personality, dramatized by two different writers with opposite takes on life.
Watchable, sporadically amusing and ultimately frustrating, because Allen is capable of so much more, but doesn't appear interested -- or willing -- to push himself any longer.
It becomes increasingly clear that Allen's idea of otherness is frozen in another era. The dividing line between the in-crowd and the out-crowd is as clear as ever, he just can't see it from where he stands.
Here the Allen surrogate is Will Ferrell playing a failed actor, all flailing gestures and squinty eyes. Whenever he's onscreen, the film comes alive. Otherwise, not so.
Simply put: There's not much trenchant pathos in the former, while the guffaws are far between in the latter.
Latest News for Melinda and Melinda
April 25, 2005:
Radha Mitchell to Climb the "Silent Hill" for TriStar Pictures
More...
April 20, 2005:
Cusack and Peet Have a Favorite "Martian"
Described by The Hollywood Reporter as "a cross between E.T. and Parenthood" is the upcoming family film "The Martian Child." John Cusack ("High... More...
April 01, 2005:
Steve Carell to "Get Smart"?
Andrew Weil of ComingSoon.net had a brief chat with funnyman Steve Carell while visiting the set of "The 40-Year-Old Virgin," and here's what the actor had to say... More...
More Movies
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie | Date |
|---|---|---|
| 75% 75% | Sherlock Holmes | 26/12 |
| 39% 39% | The Lovely Bones | 26/12 |
| 100% 100% | The French Kissers | 26/12 |
| 84% 84% | Bright Star | 26/12 |
| 83% 83% | Nowhere Boy | 26/12 |
| | Alvin and the Chipmunk… | 26/12 |
| 06% 06% | Did You Hear About the… | 26/12 |
| 05% 05% | Old Dogs | 26/12 |
What’s Hot On RT
Other News
Sponsored Links
Around The Network
- Melinda and Melinda at Rotten Tomatoes
- Melinda and Melinda at IGN
- Melinda and Melinda at AskMen
Fresh Links
Featured

Last week, Moviefone offered us their worst films of the 2000s. Now see their 40 best!

Techland examines the visual splendor of Peter Jackson's upcoming film.

Movieline gets bravely swept away with the recycled refuse of the 2000s.

Get all the latest movie updates, reviews, interviews and features here.
Competitions

We're giving away a bunch of stuff from the upcoming Squeakquel.

We're giving away five copies of Tarantino's hit, with thanks to Universal. That's a bingo.



Top Critic


