‘Uptown Girls’ is superficial romp
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Evan Marmol
“Uptown Girls” follows the banal formula of making indigence appear
to be edifying and merely a simple detour to happiness and success.
The exquisite Brittany Murphy stars as Molly Gunn, a girl born
with a silver spoon in her mouth that is summarily ripped out when
she is bilked by her manager for all of her worldly possessions.
Robbed of the trapping of opulence she is forced to venture into the
working world for survival. This querulous brat becomes the nanny for
Ray (Dakota Fanning), an equally neurotic and spoiled 8-year-old
whose mother puts her career as a record company executive ahead of
her family.
These two jaded princess quickly engage in a dominance struggle,
of which the child is often the champion. This ruckus and mischief is
reminiscent of Home Alone at times, and does serve as trite but
humorous interludes in a dowdy flick with little more to offer.
As the relationship between the two blossoms the audience interest
wanes. It quickly becomes a weary coming of age story that is
predictably formulaic. The plot is hardly cogent and the characters
are superficially developed. It is also challenging to commiserate
with the prom queen gone poor, begging the question as to who was the
target demographic.
There are endearing moments strewn about this waste of celluloid,
but not nearly enough to merit a trip to the theater.
‘Boss’ Daughter’ new coffin nail for Kutcher
“My Boss’ Daughter” is a stilted, fatuous attempt at capitalizing
off of the waning moments of Ashton Kutcher’s 15 minutes of fame. As
one of the most threadbare films of the season Kutcher involves
himself with the stunning Tara Reid, when cliched after cliched
mishap plague his attempts and this thoroughly tepid film.
This flick is rife with lowbrow, crass and crude humor in an
attempt to carry a thin and uninspired plot. “My Boss’ Daughter” is
the puerile type of movie that latches on to the flavor of the week
and hopes that the star power will attract the fans. Tara Reid is as
radiant as ever, but unforgivably flat opposite of Kutcher. They both
appear lost and disinterested in the entire film.
This film is too childish to beguile adults and too lurid to
recommend to children. In a nutshell, there appears to be no target
audience because this movie cannot reasonably appeal to any patron.
* EVAN MARMOL is Laguna Beach resident. He graduated from UC
Irvine with a degree in psychology and social behavior.
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