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Message in A Bottle
If, as they say, you're in a certain mood,
Message in a Bottle can be just the ticket. Based on Nicholas Sparks's
bestselling novel,
this handsome but overly calculated romance tale stars Robin Wright Penn
as Theresa, a Chicago Tribune researcher who finds a note encased
in a green bottle that has floated onto a Cape Cod shore. The message
within is a heartfelt, yearning declaration of love to a woman named
Catherine, but the author is unknown until Theresa (rather improbably)
tracks him down in North Carolina. He's Garret Blake (Kevin Costner), a
taciturn builder of sailboats and a grieving widower whose late wife,
poetically speaking, was the intended recipient of the seafaring note
Theresa found. Theresa, a divorcée with a son, decides to meet Garret,
only to find him as bottled-up as his message. Nevertheless, a romance
blooms on the strength of quality time in a sailboat and lots of cuddling,
though the script tosses in bits of conflict to keep their relationship
spicy. Directed by Luis Mandoki (When a Man Loves a Woman), this
love story is entirely by the numbers, with Costner inhabiting (rather
than performing) a stock fantasy of a man perfect in every way save his
broken heart. Penn brings more vibrancy to her equally predictable part,
but fortunately for all, Paul Newman, John Savage, Robbie Coltrane, and
Illeana Douglas are on hand in nicely textured character parts. Sometimes
predictability is exactly what one wants when settling in for an evening
of home video, and this movie fits the bill nicely.
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