Sweet November Review

by Steve Rhodes (Steve DOT Rhodes AT InternetReviews DOT com)
July 10th, 2001

SWEET NOVEMBER
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 2001 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****): * 1/2

THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE's Keanu Reeves and Charlize Theron are together again in Pat O'Connor's SWEET NOVEMBER. The movie is part light, romantic comedy and part major weeper, but the leads are as miscast this time as they were well cast the last. An aptly named picture, SWEET NOVEMBER is cloyingly sweet and feels like it has a running time of an entire month.
This remake of a 1968 film of the same name, starring Sandy Dennis and Anthony Newley, produces laughs at the wrong moments. The comedic first half, which plays like a rejected pilot for a television sitcom, produces few chuckles. The serious second half, on the other hand, is so schmaltzy that it will have you laughing in ridicule at its most "tender" moments, especially when the big "surprise" is revealed.

The story concerns a take-no-prisoners, work-24-hours-a-day, ad executive named Nelson Moss (Keanu Reeves). He's the best of the best, and he knows it. But when he explodes in a pompous pique in front of a major client, he's fired.

Not to worry. A crazy woman, Sara Deever (Charlize Theron), comes crashing into his life, stalking him like Glenn Close in FATAL ATTRACTION. "Nelson, would you like to be my November?" she asks him. She runs a one-month-only, in-her-home program to help lost men get in touch with their inner child. (As a side benefit, they get free sex with Charlize Theron, but the movie works hard to make this seem downright unimportant. Right.)

"Truth is," Nelson informs Sara, "I don't have a month. Time is money." He, of course, changes his mind and is soon frolicking in San Francisco Bay with Sara and a fatherless, neighborhood kid, Abner (Liam Aiken), who looks and acts like an amalgamation of every overly "cute" kid that has ever appeared in the movies.

In the absence of any genuine chemistry between them, Reeves and Theron are given silly things to say ("Life isn't perfect") and do (singing, don't ask). Everything in the movie's first half is ha-ha funny. His apartment has a dozen television sets stacked on each other like an electronics store. Hers has only one TV, but it's being used as a planter. And everything in the second part of the story is three hankie heartbreaking. Well, it's supposed to be tragically sad, but it isn't because there isn't a moment of genuine emotion in it. The people around me were laughing when they were supposed to be crying, and who could blame them. SWEET NOVEMBER doesn't deserve any respect.

SWEET NOVEMBER runs a long 1:54. It is rated PG-13 for sexual content and language and would be acceptable for kids around 11 and up.

Email: [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>
Web: <http://www.InternetReviews.com>

More on 'Sweet November'...


Originally posted in the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup. Copyright belongs to original author unless otherwise stated. We take no responsibilities nor do we endorse the contents of this review.