The Family Man
The classic holiday conundrum: would you rather spend Christmas with a scantily
clad stranger in your huge high-rise apartment or wake up in a bath of dog
slaver on a morning filled with screaming kids and wrapping paper? In Brett
Ratner's The Family Man, Nicolas Cage and Téa Leoni star as Jeff
and Kate, college sweethearts whose adult lives hinge on a decision they make
in an airport: does Jeff take a London internship while Kate goes to law
school, or do they continue with their plans to start a life together? Ignoring
Kate's pleas to stay, Jeff goes to England; 13 years later he's an
über-successful Wall Street broker and ladies' man. But an encounter with
a stranger who is somehow able to alter reality plucks him from his posh New
York pad and plops him down in the middle of suburban New Jersey. Realizing
he's being given a glimpse of what things would have been like had he married
Kate, Jeff decides that it's a wonderful life. This predictable story line
benefits from Leoni's performance: she's not suspicious enough of the clueless
look-alike who mysteriously takes her husband's place one day, but her optimism
and good humor -- qualities The Family Man shares -- are ample
compensation. At the Flagship, Holiday, Hoyts Providence Place 16, Showcase, and
Swansea cinemas.
-- April Greene
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