2/10
Wait, I'm supposed to empathize with Anna?
13 January 2006
This could've been one of those fun-and-fancy-free movies, with a likable heroine, a lighthearted escape, and fun roaming the countryside with a cute guy in tow. Whoops. Stop at item number one.

Was it Moore's acting? She has done far better in b*tchier roles (see Saved!) than protagonist-ic ones. Here, her regrettable gift at whining is combined with what the writers must have assumed is a normal teenage demeanor of spoiled, petulant adolescent who supposedly yearns for freedom but has no conception of what the real world is like without the protection of her father's name and money, nor does she seem to sincerely want one. Her complaints are so clichés and insincere that we sense she would be appeased if daddy let her have a shopping spree instead. She longs for some romanticized version of freedom, seen perhaps in movies, but it obviously emotionally unequipped to handle it. This, and Ben's obvious perception of this (I liked him more at the beginning when he was only annoyed by her, and don't see why he stopped) totally derail the movie.

I don't like to go on so about a single aspect of a film when others -- the extras, the adventures they have together through a beautiful countryside, and so on -- are so appealing. But there you have it. This movie was almost charming. Too bad.
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