Tag: Ari Graynor

  • Australian Trailer for Celeste and Jesse Forever

    Australian Trailer for Celeste and Jesse Forever

    Walt Disney Studios Australia has released a trailer for the indiefied romantic dramedy Celeste and Jesse Forever,  directed by Lee Toland Krieger and starring Rashida Jones, Andy Samberg, Chris Messina, Ari Graynor, Will McCormack, Emma Roberts, and Elijah Wood. This looks like it will be a right gem of a film, and we’re already anticipating tissue boxes will be needed.

    Celeste (Rashida Jones) and Jesse (Andy Samberg) met in high school, married young and are growing apart. Now thirty, Celeste is the driven owner of her own media consulting firm, Jesse is once again unemployed and in no particular rush to do anything with his life. Celeste is convinced that divorcing Jesse is the right thing to do – she is on her way up, he is on his way nowhere, and if they do it now instead of later, they can remain supportive friends. Jesse passively accepts this transition into friendship, even though he is still in love with her. As the reality of their separation sets in, Celeste slowly and painfully realizes she has been cavalier about their relationship, and her decision, which once seemed mature and progressive, now seems impulsive and selfish. But her timing with Jesse is less than fortuitous. While navigating the turbulent changes in their lives and in their hearts, these two learn that in order to truly love someone, you may have to let them go.

    Celeste and Jesse Forever is released in Australia from Disney on 29 November 2012.

  • For a Good Time, Call Green Band Trailer

    For a Good Time, Call Green Band Trailer

    For a Good Time, Call posterOn the heels of the red-band trailer debut, that played with Ted this weekend in the US, Focus Features have released a new green band trailer for the raunchy comedy For a Good Time, Call, starring Lauren Anne Miller, Ari Graynor and Justin Long and directed by Jamie Travis.

    This looks like a bit of fun from debut feature director Travis, whose previous works have included a series of shorts and the documentary The National Parks Project.

    Synopsis: The reserved Lauren (Lauren Anne Miller) and the irrepressible Katie (Ari Graynor) are polar opposites… and past enemies. But when both come up short on the funds needed to afford their dream New York City apartment a mutual friend (Justin Long) re-introduces them and they reluctantly agree to room together. These apartment-mates have nothing in common – until Lauren discovers that Katie is working as a phone-sex operator, and recognizes a good business opportunity. But as their business partnership takes off, their newfound friendship finds unexpected challenges that may leave them both, as they say, hanging on the telephone.

    For a Good Time, Call is released in select US cinemas on 31 August 2012 and nationally on 7 September 2012. It does not currently have an Australian release date.

  • Trailer and Poster for Celeste and Jesse Forever

    Trailer and Poster for Celeste and Jesse Forever

    Sony Pictures Classics (via iTunes Trailers) has released a trailer for the indiefied romantic dramedy Celeste and Jesse Forever,  directed by Lee Toland Krieger and starring Rashida Jones, Andy Samberg, Chris Messina, Ari Graynor, Will McCormack, Emma Roberts, and Elijah Wood. This looks like it will be a right gem of a film, and we’re already anticipating tissue boxes will be needed.

    Synopsis: Celeste (Rashida Jones) and Jesse (Andy Samberg) met in high school, married young and are growing apart. Now thirty, Celeste is the driven owner of her own media consulting firm, Jesse is once again unemployed and in no particular rush to do anything with his life. Celeste is convinced that divorcing Jesse is the right thing to do – she is on her way up, he is on his way nowhere, and if they do it now instead of later, they can remain supportive friends. Jesse passively accepts this transition into friendship, even though he is still in love with her. As the reality of their separation sets in, Celeste slowly and painfully realizes she has been cavalier about their relationship, and her decision, which once seemed mature and progressive, now seems impulsive and selfish. But her timing with Jesse is less than fortuitous. While navigating the turbulent changes in their lives and in their hearts, these two learn that in order to truly love someone, you may have to let them go.

    Celeste and Jesse Forever is released in the US on 3 August 2012.

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    Celeste and Jesse Forever poster

  • Review: What’s Your Number?

    Review: What’s Your Number?

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”What’s Your Number? (2011)” float=”true” align=”right” width=”200″]

    What's Your Number? - Australian poster

    DirectorMark Mylod

    Runtime: 120 minutes

    Starring: Anna Faris, Chris EvansZachary Quinto, Andy Samberg, Ari Graynor, Martin Freeman

    Distributor: Fox

    CountryUS

    Rating: It’s Your Money (?)

    More info[/stextbox]

    ‘Romantic comedy’ has become a bit of a misleading label of late, with the romance being synonymous with foreplay as the focal point of the story. Gone are the days in which a romantic encounter atop the Empire State Building would suffice, or a cross-country trip between two mismatched soul-mates would result in true love, with everything from No Strings Attached to the identical Friends With Benefits attempting to stick a square peg into the mainstream’s all-too-willing hole.  Not for nothing either: the success of risqué comedies Knocked Up and Bridesmaids have established the public’s craving for something they can enjoy with their best mates and their favourite squeeze equally.

    In What’s Your Number?, based on Karyn Bosnak’s novel 20 Times a Lady, Ally Darling (Anna Faris, Yogi Bear) breaks with the latest in a long line of bad relationships and discovers, in the pages of a women’s glossy magazine, that she has slept with more men than double the national average. Concerned she will exceed twenty lovers without ever finding “the one”, she enlists the help of the promiscuous Colin (Chris Evans, Captain America: The First Avenger), who lives in the apartment across the hall. In exchange for using her apartment to hide out from his endless string of morning after girls, he aids her in tracking down past lovers in the hope that one of them will be what she has been looking for.

    Every romantic comedy has a conceit that needs to be overcome. Without these arbitrary rules, there would be no conflict and the two people on the poster would probably get together in the first reel. What’s Your Number? has the particularly obnoxious setup of using the number of sexual partners a woman is “supposed” to have before finding the true man. The aim appears to be to present Ally Darling as a modern woman, fully in control of her destiny, but just blind to the fact that she has always been best when beating her own drum. That’s not the euphemism you think it is. Instead, before Ally comes to her final and inevitable realisation, it is almost as though the film is punishing its lead for having a less than “virtuous” history. Is that really the message behind this film? Too much sex might stop you from bagging a man? Indeed, several gags about worn-out vaginas seem to subtly suggest so.

    Anna Faris continues her trend of spotty film role selections, despite the fact that we know she is capable of so much more from Brokeback Mountain, Lost in Translation and her appearances on TV’s Entourage. Here she does nothing to redeem the endless parade of Scary Movie films or rom-coms that someone in her talent agency needs to be shot out of a canon for. Meanwhile, genuine megastar Chris Evans, fresh from Captain America and soon to return to the role in The Avengers, is too good for this slender material. Is he still paying penance to Fox for the Fantastic Four films? That said, his previous experience doesn’t go entirely to waste. Shots in which he wears little more than a hand-towel are sure to please all the right demographics.

    It’s not a complete disaster, with a handful of genuinely funny lines throughout. One of the best Twitter jokes to grace the screen comes in Ally’s enquiry to Colin as to the location of her coffee pot. “I broke it. If you were on Twitter you would know that already,” comes the knowing reply. Of course, this is all ruined by Ed Begley Jr’s role as a Twitter obsessed father, who perpetuates the bad rep that Tweeters get.  It’s the dick jokes that are the real zingers, including a bit from Anthony Mackie as a closeted ex with political aspirations,  but as with many recent rom-coms, it falls short of genuine edge with its reliance on coy winks over outrageous zingers.

    [stextbox id=”custom”]What’s Your Number? is a question that should be answered in single digits, although if nudge-nudge-wink-wink references and naked Avengers are a thing, this is your movie.[/stextbox]