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A Look at Cameron Crowe's New Romantic Comedy Elizabethtown

The Film's Bad Ending Almost Sinks the Entire Experience

By El Bicho, published Oct 27, 2005
Published Content: 558  Total Views: 79,274  Favorited By: 10 CPs
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Rating: 3.1 of 5
Drew Baylor is a shoe designer for Mercury, a Nike-esque company. His recent creation, the Spasmotica, is so awful that one reporter believes that it might make an entire generation go back to bare feet. It would be bad enough if this was the worst footwear since Steve Martin's Cruel Shoes, but it also has the unique distinction of possibly being the worst product ever made; causing Mercury to lose almost a billion dollars. His boss, played wonderfully by Alec Baldwin, makes Drew give an interview to a business magazine, where he takes full responsibility. It will hit the newsstands in about a week.

Drew goes home and prepares to kill himself in a surprisingly funny scene, but is interrupted by the news that his father has died while on a visit to his hometown of Elizabethtown, Kentucky. Drew is the eldest son, so he has to bring back his father's ashes, which is going to be a difficult task because his family and friends want his body to be buried there with them. Adding to the awkwardness is the fact that this will be the first time Drew has been back to meet his Southern relatives.

On the plane there, Drew meets Claire, a flight attendant. At first, she's cute and quirky, but quickly becomes awkwardly desperate as she pesters him throughout the flight and as she gives him her phone numbers and directions to Elizabethtown.

Drew is overwhelmed and all alone as he juggles the multiple conflicts. He has no one, so he turns to Claire. She helps him through the situations with solace and words of wisdom. She is hip and intelligent, coming across like a completely different person than the stalker on the plane from hours earlier. They chat and hang out, but keep it platonic because they both know it's going to be a temporary thing. He has his life and she has hers, including a boyfriend named Ben, who is a college professor. At least, that's the plan.

Comments
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Thanks for this honest review. I enjoyed. Nice work.

Posted on 05/07/2007 at 2:05:00 AM

 
I agree that the whole road-trip book was a little unbelievable, but then again it is a movie. And don't we go to movies to escape reality, if just for a little while?

Posted on 10/27/2005 at 11:10:00 PM

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