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15 Punch-Drunk Love (2003)

updated 3rd February 2003
reviewer's rating
Four Stars
Reviewed by Nev Pierce


Director
Paul Thomas Anderson
Writer
Paul Thomas Anderson
Stars
Adam Sandler
Emily Watson
Philip Seymour Hoffman
Luis Guzmán
Mary Lynn Rajskub
Lisa Spector
Length
95 minutes
Distributor
Columbia TriStar
Cinema
7th February 2003
Country
USA
Genres
Comedy
Romance
Web Links
Emily Watson interview

Paul Thomas Anderson interview



Bedfellows don't come much more unlikely than Paul Thomas Anderson and Adam Sandler.

One, a precocious writer-director whose probing of the human condition produced the masterpiece "Magnolia". The other a critically reviled slapstick star who spends most of his movies tripping over his own brow (it's so damn low).

Yet the pairing sparks for this romantic comedy - even if the original, off-kilter result is about as far from "Sleepless in Seattle" as Heather Graham is from talent.

Sandler is Barry Egan, an eccentric small-business man with anger 'issues', who combats loneliness one night by ringing a phone sex line. But the operation's bent, and soon he's dodging blackmailers, while incompetently courting the kooky Lena Leonard (Emily Watson).

Anderson's movie could be one part of a multi-stranded, "Magnolia"-style epic - it certainly includes a couple of unexplained incidents (a car crash, an abandoned harmonium) that could conjoin with other bizarre tales.

Instead the director focuses on a hyper-real celebration of true love - with the pulse of infatuation represented through an aggressively loud, discordant soundtrack and the occasional appearance of kaleidoscopic inserts.

It's peculiar, unpredictable and engrossing - a fractured, unconventional love story shot as an old-school, Technicolor romance.

Watson is effervescent, but it's Sandler's movie. Egan shares the violence of the star's usual dumbass screen persona, but here it's an expression of an urge to feel, to be shocked out of his humdrum existence. It's the same sentiment that fuelled the scrap-happy characters in David Fincher's "Fight Club".

Sandler defies conventional wisdom with an intelligent, soulful, pained-behind-the-eyes performance - a portrait of disconnected modern man ("I don't know if there is anything wrong because I don't know how other people are. Sometimes I cry a lot for no reason").

"Punch-Drunk Love" is both funny and moving - profoundly odd, but also oddly profound. Go see.

"Punch-Drunk Love" opens in UK cinemas on Friday 7th February 2003.









Find out more about "Punch-Drunk Love" at



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