Thursday, April 23, 2020

Book Club Review: Four Screen Legends, Fifty Shades and One Really Bad Movie

Four female friends think they can spice up their book club, and maybe their love lives, by wallowing in the kinky prose of E.L. JamesFifty Shades of Grey.Thats the premise of this life-after-60 comedy, and theres not a doubt in the world that its a pleasure to bask in the company of the four lead actresses Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburgen. Until, that is, you see what debuting director Bill Holderman and his cowriter Erin Simms have concocted for this quartet of greats. Some may feel like this smirking sex farce goes down easy. Others may choke on it or worse, feel like theyve wandered into the cinematic equivalent of Christian Greys Red Room of Pain?

Jane Fonda: Weinstein Victims Being Heard Because They're 'Famous and White'

Book Club is set in Los Angeles where everyones living la vida luxe in the sort of dcor porn that Nancy Meyers might envy. Vivian (Fonda) runs a hotel and has a stable of studs to choose from. Sharon (Bergen) is a federal judge whos done with the husband (Ed Begley, Jr.) who dumped her for a young trophy fianc (Mircea Monroe). Diane (Keaton) is a widow who kind of likes being on her own. And Carol (Steenburgen) is a restaurateur with a newly retired husband, Bruce (Craig T. Nelson), whos having trouble both getting and keeping it up.

So does this movie, which keeps putting AARP gags into the mouths of actresses who deserve so much better. Their characters dont need matchmakers they seem to be thriving just as they are, thank you very much. Instead, were told that freewheeling Vivian has to settle down with just one man, her former beau (Don Johnson, a.k.a. father of Dakota Johnson, the lead in the film of Fifty Shades). Diane has to find happiness with a mega-rich aviator (Andy Garcia). Sharon has to go online to find a date (Richard Dreyfuss and Wallace Shawn play two of the candidates). And Carol has to slip Viagra into the drink of her husband to cure his post-retirement impotence.

The insidious
message of this insulting string of tired jokes disguised as a movie is that these
four smart, funny, rigorously independent women, played by top actresses who fit the same description, cant find true happiness without a man.
Seriously? In 2018? In a time of #MeToo
and #TimesUp? No ones knocking finding
a soulmate at any age. But Book Club is
selling Cinderella fantasies that went out last century. Were not buying it.
And neither these women nor you should either.


Book Club Review: Four Screen Legends, Fifty Shades and One Really Bad Movie

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