"Legally Blonde"
director Robert Luketic's latest movie "The Ugly
Truth” qualifies as the ideal date movie. This giddy, lightweight,
battle-of-the-sexes, romantic comedy about polar opposites pitted against each
other, Gerard Butler and Katherine
Heigl, has chemistry to burn, and the chemistry is incendiary! Mind you,
the narrative conceit of opposites attracting is as ancient as the Harold Lloyd silent comedy "Girl Shy" (1924)
and "The Ugly Truth" is just as predictable. Recent examples of
similar romantic comedies include "What Women Want," "Maid
in Manhattan," "Failure to Launch,"
"Sweet Home Alabama," and "You've Got Mail." Nevertheless, the Nicole
Eastman, Karen McCullah Lutz, and Kristin Smith
screenplay works like a charm, particularly because the leads, Gerard Butler
and Katherine Heigl, play such charismatic characters. Butler displays a
genuine knack for comedy, while Heigl shows no shame when she makes a buffoon
of herself. Indeed, Heigl acted as an executive producer, and that is saying a
lot after you see the hilarious scenes at the baseball park and in the
restaurant.
Abby Richter (Katherine Heigl of "27 Dresses")
is a smart, capable, good-looking, blonde television producer of a local
Sacramento morning talk show with less-than-spectacular ratings. She is also
controlling and manipulative and hasn't been on an exciting date for eleven
months. In other words, she's got man problems, the kind of man problems that
mean she doesn't have a man around when she needs him. Abby and her assistant
Joy (Bree Turner of "Joe
Dirt") do research on every guy that our heroine dates. When she
goes out on a date, Abby has already run a background check on the guy.
Furthermore, she comes with a list of topics to discuss in case the
conversation dries up. Predictably, at the end of an evening, Abby winds up
walking herself back to her apartment.
Abby is about to go to sleep when her cute pet cat D'Artagnan mashes the remote
control and changes the channel to a 'live' public access cable program called
"The Ugly Truth." Abby cannot believe her ears as the unshaven
chauvinistic male host sets fire to three bestsellers about dating and
relationships in a barbecue grill. Mike Chadaway (Gerard Butler of
"300") epitomes the typical, politically incorrect, shock-jock host who
speaks plainly about men, women, and sex. According to Mike, men hate to hear
about a gal's problems, they only want oral sex. Abby phones him up and informs
him that men are sensitive, too. When he asks her about her current boyfriend,
she lapses into silence. Mike labels her 'Lassie' and cuts her off.
The next morning at work, Abby is shocked when her boss, Stuart (Nick Searcy of "Runaway
Jury"), announces that he has hired Mike Chadaway to boost their
sagging ratings. Initially, Abby hates the idea, but she perseveres. Stuart,
who fears for Abby's job and his son's college tuition, persuades Abby to give
Mike a chance. Not surprisingly, Mike wins them high ratings. Abby tells him
about her next door neighbor, Colin (Eric Winter of the soaper "Days
of Our Lives"), an orthopedic surgeon with a body like a
Chippendale dancer. Mike bets her he can show her how to win the guy or he'll
quit the show. Abby agrees and Mike begins what looks like the modern day
equivalent of "Pygmalion." Mike takes Abby out to buy new outfits,
longer hair, and tells her to stop behaving like a psycho control freak. He
teaches Abby how to hang up on a guy and know if he is going to call back. Abby
is flabbergasted when everything that Mike tells her to do works. Mike's magic
not only works on Abby, but also the couple that hosts Abby's morning talk
show, Georgia (Cheryl Hines of "Along Came Polly") and Larry (John Michael Higgins of "Yes Man") who having
been hitting off lately. Basically, they are unhappily married because she earns
more money and she won't let him be the man.
Eventually, all the coaching that Mike gives Abby and their constant bickering
with each other takes a toll of their at-arms-length relationship and the ice
cracks in ways that you wouldn't expect. Mike is being courted by the networks
and he gets an audition on the "The Late Late Show
with Craig Ferguson." Of course, the network loves Mike's
personality and he is tempted. Abby and he step on an elevator and things
change.
Although this harmless fluff carries an R-rating, "The Ugly Truth" is
clever, frivolous, borderline crude but lacks nudity. Sure, some of the subject
matter and the language might prove offensive, but this guy-wants-gal,
guy-loses-gal, and guy-gets-gal back is infectiously entertaining stuff without
a mean-spirit to be found anywhere in its trim 96-minutes. If "The
Hangover" was a good way to get the summer cranked up with a comedy, then
"The Ugly Truth" is a great way to wrap
it up with laughs galore.