

Romantic Comedy | 120 minutes | Rated [M] contains drug use | Origin: USA | Official Site
Starring Meryl Streep, Steve Martin, Alec Baldwin, John Krasinski, Hunter Parrish, Lake Bell
Directed by Nancy Meyers ('The Holiday', 'Something's Gotta Give', 'What Women Want')
Written by Nancy Meyers
Some of the best lines in "It's Complicated" can't be printed in a family newspaper. Heck, some of the best lines aren't even lines. Instead, they're looks, landed with the skill of a Chesley Sullenberger by two masters of comic acting in this very grown-up - and very funny - love story. The romantic comedy about a divorced couple having an affair manages to be both light on its feet and heavy enough to deliver something of a message.
The masters in question, of course, are Meryl Streep and Alec Baldwin. As Jane and Jake Adler - 10 years divorced and with three grown children, yet suddenly drawn back into each other's lives (and beds) after a drunken fling over the weekend of their son's (Hunter Parrish) college graduation - the stars pick up the movie and run away with it. The writing and direction, by rom-com veteran Nancy Meyers ("Something's Gotta Give"), are deft enough. But it's Streep and Baldwin's gamely ribald performances, and their seemingly effortless, effervescent chemistry, that put the pep in this movie's highly choreographed, yet richly entertaining step.
True to the film's title, Jane and Jake's affair is a little tricky, made so both by the fact that Jake is remarried, to a hot but hard-looking harpy played by Lake Bell, and by the growing flirtation between Jane and Adam (Steve Martin), the gentlemanly architect who's redoing her house.
Jane, is a talented chef and owner of a bustling bakery-cum-coffeehouse, and Meyers sets as many scenes as possible within its homey confines. There, or in Jane's casually elegant home kitchen, around whose farm-style table she's often shown preparing food for her adorable brood, which includes daughters played by Zoe Kazan and Caitlin Fitzgerald, and a future son-in-law (John Krasinski, never better).
Ten years after her marriage failed, food has become, for Jane, almost a surrogate for love. She uses it to bind her kids to her. She uses it to seduce Adam, in a late-night bout of the munchies brought on by a pot-fuelled party, after which they passionately bake chocolate croissants together.
In the end, though, we don't ever get to see the finished new kitchen. We don't have to. When Jane finally does find love -- and I'm not going to say with whom -- it's not because of what's in her hearth, but in her heart.
The Washington Post


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