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Management
Starring:
Jennifer Aniston, Steve Zahn, Woody Harrelson
Genre: Romantic Comedy
In Theaters: May 15th 2009

Review By:
Andrea Tuccillo

School:
St. John's University Class of 2007

Favorite Quote:
"If you always do what interests you at least one person is pleased." - Katharine Hepburn

Click Here For Our Interview with Jennifer Aniston
Click Here For Our Interview with Steve Zahn

Management

Review By: Andrea Tuccillo
AndreaTuccillo @TheCinemaSource.com

Movie Grade: B

Ok, so it didn’t do too well at the box office, or with critics. And some people love to bash Jennifer Aniston. And most people usually have a strong aversion to stalkers. However, despite all this, these little things failed to sway my opinion about Management. I liked it.

Get past your unjustified hatred of Jennifer Aniston if need be, and put aside the stalker creep-factor for a brief moment and you might just see what I saw – a sweet little movie about unlikely love. Albeit love between two people with one very significant thing in common: they’re stuck. In their job, in their relationships, in their life – in everything. They essentially need each other to pull themselves out of their rut. Except one of them realizes before the other, hence the stalker-like behavior.

Steve Zahn plays Mike, an ambitionless guy who lives and works at his parents’ Arizona motel. Aniston plays Sue, a corporate art saleswoman in town on a business trip. Donning a reddish wig concealing her trademark golden locks, Aniston sheds her celebrity sheen to play a well-worn woman who’s not too keen on life’s little surprises. She thinks she wants stability and enjoys when everything “makes sense.” Mike, on the other hand, is like a child. He’s impulsive, he wears his heart on his sleeve, and he doesn’t apologize for it.

When he first meets Sue at the check-in desk he’s smitten, so he hatches an – awkward – plan to show up at her room with complimentary bottle service (an amenity he just made up). For some reason she lets him in and eventually allows him to touch her (clothed) butt. Don’t ask, it was weird. Guess she didn’t think he was a total weirdo though, because before she leaves the motel, she impulsively sleeps with him, thinking she’ll never see him again.

Too bad he follows her back home to Maryland. But is he really a stalker if she’s secretly glad to him? They’re relationship isn’t what you’d expect. You can tell Sue is genuinely fond of him, but she’s scared to take a chance on someone who isn’t “stable” (in the monetary sense, and maybe a little in the emotional sense too). Together the two need to work out their issues and become better people for one another; learn how to manage their lives so to speak. See what I did just then?

Zahn is his usual goofy, charming self. He’s got a puppy dog quality to him, that even when he does outrageous, stalker-y things (like parachuting into Sue’s pool), you still find him endearing. It’s like, you wouldn’t want something doing that to you, but well, it’s cute when he does it.

And every now and then Aniston finds an un-glossy smaller role to sink her teeth into ala The Good Girl. I like ...




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