Love & Other Drugs (***½)
Directed by: Edward Zwick
Starring: Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, Oliver Platt, Hank Azaria,
Josh Gad, Gebriel Macht, Judy Greer
Seen: January 30th 2011
***½ Out of ****
Love & Other Drugs is definitely one of the better romance movies I’ve
seen, with a bit of great comedy sprinkled in as well. Jake Gyllenhaal and Anne
Hathaway share a palpable chemistry, and the audience is rooting
for them to “work out” from the first time their two characters are introduced.
Jamie Randall (Gyllenhaal) is a smooth-talking ladies man who gets
fired from his job as an electronics salesman for sleeping with his boss’
girlfriend. His rich brother Josh (Gad) gets him a job as a medical rep for
Pfizer after quite a colourful and interesting family dinner, and from here it
is as if Jamie finds his true calling. It does take him a little while to lock
into his style of selling, but once he gets there, you forget that he ever had
any trouble starting off. He is Pfizer’s salesman for Zoloft and Zithromax, and
he does all he can to get his product in with influential Dr. Knight (Azaria), even
if that means seducing Cindy (Greer), Dr. Knight’s assistant. His big break in
the rep business comes when he gets a new drug, the by now infamous Viagra,
which, coupled with his womanising ways, is his dream product.
On a sales trip to the doctor’s offices, Jamie accompanies the doctor
into a consultation, where he meets Maggie Murdock (Hathaway), who suffers from
early onset Parkinson’s disease. The two start off with sparks flying, and
these sparks pretty much never stops as the two embark on a “no-strings-attached”
physical relationship. Maggie has her defences up against commitment because
she doesn’t need the guy bailing after making her fall in love because of her
disease, and Jamie’s nature is the seduction game. They grow closer however,
and they certainly don’t make things that easy for each other. Jamie persists
though, and what follows is raw and beautiful romance the likes of which I haven’t
seen in movies for many years.
Gyllenhaal and Hathaway are both brilliant actors, and they continue
that trend in Love & Other Drugs, presenting two messed-up people who find
a certain solace in each other. The two spend quite a lot of time together sans
clothing in fairly steamy embraces, from there the 16LSN rating, and this is
Anne Hathaway continuing her violent break-away from her image shaped from her
early movies such as The Princess Diaries. Oliver Platt, as Bruce, Jamie’s
mentor and partner in the rep world, does what he does best, another
impersonation of himself (I don’t know him, so that statement might be
inaccurate, but I still like the actor), while Hank Azaria creates a slightly
sad and oddly influential Dr. Knight. The supporting cast all do their bit,
Josh Gad as Jamie’s socially inept but very wealthy brother; Judy Greer as the
giddy assistant Cindy; and Gabriel Macht as Jamie’s drug sales competitor.
Love & Other Drugs is among the top romance movies I’ve ever seen,
as it knows what it wants to say and it doesn’t sugar-coat the relationship in any way. We all may know what’s on the way, but we’re rooting for the couple all along…
Comments
Bad acting - Not so, Gyllenhaal and Hathaway are both brilliant in this movie.
Just not for you then Seep, fair enough.