Screenwriter and director Bart Freundlich fails to offer fresh insights into the problems of contemporary relationships, and many of his comic targets are easy and conventional.
Trust the Man (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:100
Fresh:28
Rotten:72
Average Rating:4.6/10
Consensus: What aspires to be a sophisticated, unconventional romantic comedy turns out to be a contrivance-filled pretender to other, better films of its genre.
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $1,466,103
Synopsis: A lighthearted meditation on the cares and commitments of adulthood, Bart Freundlich's rom-com drama is a witty, ultra-contemporary vision of urban love. Two Manhattan couples enjoy complicated... A lighthearted meditation on the cares and commitments of adulthood, Bart Freundlich's rom-com drama is a witty, ultra-contemporary vision of urban love. Two Manhattan couples enjoy complicated relationships: Tom and Rebecca (David Duchovny and Julianne Moore) are a glamorous married couple with two kids and a troubled sex life; Rebecca's best friend, Elaine (Maggie Gylenhaal), is in a long-term relationship with Rebecca's brother, Tobey (Billy Crudup), who is also Tom's best friend. Tom has recently quit his advertising job to be a stay-at-home dad, and Rebecca is a successful actress with a depleting libido; thus, despite the couple's obvious closeness, Tom's porn consumption and general distraction have increased considerably. Meanwhile, Elaine juggles a stressful job in publishing and a fledgling career as a children's-book author, while Tobey's job as a copywriter is considerably less demanding. It is soon evident that Tobey has never quite grown up, and when Elaine decides that she wants to get married and have kids, she realizes she'll have to do it with someone else. The turmoil that ensues contains a number of hilarious, emotionally charged encounters between friends and lovers, and an undeniably romantic conclusion. The tale unfolds anecdotally in a style of verbal sparring that recalls Woody Allen; so too does the preponderance of recognizable New York locations, in a view of the city that makes the most of its charms. The movie also boasts well-executed cameos by Ellen Barkin as an imperious publisher, James LeGros as an eccentric songster, Eva Mendes as a temptress from Tobey's past, and Gary Shandling as an earringed therapist. [More]
Starring: David Duchovny, Julianne Moore, Billy Crudup, Maggie Gyllenhaal
Starring: David Duchovny, Julianne Moore, Billy Crudup, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Bob Balaban, Ellen Barkin, James LeGros, Garry Shandling, Eva Mendes, Liam Broggy, Justin Bartha, Sterling K. Brown
Director: Bart Freundlich
Director: Bart Freundlich
Producer: Tim Perell
Composer: Clint Mansell
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
Reviews for Trust the Man
There's nothing terribly wrong with this comedy about the romantic dalliances of four New Yorkers, but there's nothing terribly right about it, either.
Bizarrely obsessed with bathroom humor (this would-be sparkling comedy actually begins with a poop joke) and dumb gags at a meeting of sex addicts.
The people behind this film would not recognize complex, honest emotion if it hit them in the face with a frying pan.
Freundlich has some merciless fun at his gender's expense, holding up two best-pal schlubs, Tom (David Duchovny) and Tobey (Billy Crudup), for ridicule.
The movie can't decide if it wants to be a well-observed urban relationship drama or a madcap comedy.
Has a few minor deficiencies in certain areas. Laughs, for one thing.
Shallow. Freundlich doesn’t have a clue about being married to a famous actress. None of the dialogue sounds real.
Mopey Manhattan thirtysomethings sounding off might be Bart Freundlich's idea of a good time but it's not mine.
Bart Freundlich's romantic comedy substitutes overactive hormons for a love story, and settles for bathroom humor and guilty giggles.
A group of charming and talented actors are forced to portray some of the most smug, annoying and thoroughly unlikable characters ever seen in a film not made by Henry Jaglom or Ed Burns.
Is it possible to completely loathe the premise on which a film is based, while still kind of enjoying watching it?
Captures, with both accuracy and fleeting optimism, those domestic arguments that end in either irritataed silence or half-hearted, good-enough-for-now reconciliation.
So don't come to this thing with high expectations for something new and different, because it ain't.
Trying to mimic the Woody Allen films is not a bad thing to do, but why not put a spin on it?
Trust the Man mainly feels like the work of a New Yorker who hasn't left his trendy neighborhood in ten years.
Latest News for Trust the Man
March 29, 2007:
Sequel Rumor Round-Up: Duchovny Talks "X-Files 2," Boyle Suggests "28 Months Later"?
David Duchovny's doing some sequel talk. Nope, this isn't about the long hoped-for second installments in the "Return to Me" and "Trust the Man" sagas;... More...
August 27, 2006:
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August 20, 2006:
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August 17, 2006:
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This weekend Samuel L. Jackson looks to seize control of the muthaf*ckin' box office with his new muthaf*ckin' film "Snakes on a Plane" which invades theaters on a... More...
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