Next Stop, Wonderland
Miramax head Harvey Weinstein shelled out $6 million for this romantic comedy
after catching it at this year's Sundance Film Festival. Is it worth the money?
The premise, which revolves around two thirtysomethings (she's 29 and he's 35)
trying to find their foothold in life, is a tad maudlin and a bit predictable.
But the witty script that director Brad Anderson wrote with actor Lyn Vaus is
peppered with humorous quips and tart contemplations about love, destiny, and
life's bigger picture. Wonderland will also score points with the local
audience, since it was shot in Boston and makes use of such landmarks as
Wonderland Racetrack, the New England Aquarium, and the Burren pub in Davis
Square.
Hope Davis is Erin, a nurse newly jilted by her left-wing radical boyfriend;
Alan Gelfant is Alan, a plumber struggling through college and volunteering at
the Aquarium with hopes of becoming a marine biologist. He's into Frankie the
loan shark (Victor Argo) for his tuition, and Frankie, for his own sordid
political gain, wants to use Alan to put a scare into Aquarium officials. Even
more menacing than Frankie is Erin's interfering mom, who places personal adds
for her in the local papers. Erin and Alan seem perfect for each other, but
they spend the entirety of the film circulating through the same urban venues
and recursively coming into near-contact. Will they ever meet? That's the
question that keeps the film afloat, and though Davis and Gelfant are amiable
enough, the real hook here is Anderson's energetic craftsmanship and Boston's
opulent cityscape. At the Showcase Cinemas Seekonk 9 and 10.
-- Tom Meek
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