Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Film Review: 10 Years

The Bottom Line

Reunion-centered ensemble pic isn't as funny as advertised, but happily avoids full-on sappiness too.


Opens:

Friday, September 14 (Anchor Bay)

Cast:

Channing Tatum, Jenna Dewan-Tatum, Chris Pratt, Rosario Dawson, Justin Long, Oscar Isaac, Kate Mara, Ron Livingston, Lynn Collins, Ari Graynor, Anthony Mackie, Max Minghella, Aubrey Plaza, Scott Porter, Brian Geraghty , Aaron Yoo, Eiko Nijo, Nick Zano

Director-Screenwriter:

Jamie Linden

Jamie Linden surrounds his "Dear John" star Channing Tatum with a strong ensemble cast

A high-school reunion story that spreads attention among its high-profile cast members more evenly than the average film of this sort, Jamie Linden's 10 Years is dedicated to the urge to believe that a single get-together can afford closure on everything from prom night disappointments to misguided life choices. More bittersweet than funny but not a downer overall, the pic has reasonable prospects with young viewers who haven't seen many of its thematic ancestors.

While Linden's script spreads the subplots around heavily, the movie's main identification is with Jake (Channing Tatum, who just so happens to be a producer), who loves girlfriend Jess (Tatum's wife, Jenna Dewan-Tatum) but can't decide when to pop the question. Bringing Jess along to his ten-year reunion, he's flustered to see high school sweetheart Mary (Rosario Dawson) and the husband (Ron Livingston) he didn't know she had.

Buzzing around Jake in a flurry of "so good to see you!"s are old classmates who became rock stars (Oscar Isaac), moved to the big city (Justin Long), or simply decided to grow up and stop bullying nerds (Chris Pratt, helped by unusually tolerant wife Ari Graynor). As usual with a large ensemble, recounting the subplots (and even the characters) would take a while, but only a couple of key cast members get lost in the shuffle (sorry, Anthony Mackie).

Among the more successful throughlines is a second-chance courtship between Isaac's rock star and the only girl at the reunion (Kate Mara) who isn't fawning over him, and, it turns out, has never even heard his hit song. Among the least pleasing is one in which Pratt tries to make amends with every nerd he ever belittled, winds up making them deeply uncomfortable, and eventually drinks himself into a full reversion to jerk mode. If anybody could keep this ball rolling, it's Pratt, who in previous roles has trained viewers to love him despite many faults. Though we're with Pratt for a while, Linden soon forces him to be more of a boor than we can take.

It wouldn't be a party without some drunken unpleasantness, of course. And 10 Years benefits from actors (like Dawson) who can generate enough distractingly warm-hearted vibes to keep the overall mood positive. This isn't a new generation's Big Chill and doesn't try to be -- but it's a good deal more genuine-feeling than American Reunion, whose characters graduated just a couple of years earlier than this crew but seem much closer to settling into dull adulthood.
Production Companies: Temple Hill, Iron Horse

Cast: Channing Tatum, Jenna Dewan-Tatum, Chris Pratt, Rosario Dawson, Justin Long, Oscar Isaac, Kate Mara, Ron Livingston, Lynn Collins, Ari Graynor, Anthony Mackie, Max Minghella, Aubrey Plaza, Scott Porter, Brian Geraghty , Aaron Yoo, Eiko Nijo, Nick Zano

Director-Screenwriter: Jamie Linden

Producers: Wyck Godfrey, Marty Bowen, Reid Carolin, Channing Tatum

Executive producers: Frank Mancuso, Jr., Eric Gores

Director of photography: Steven Fierberg

Production designer: Kara Lindstrom

Music: Chad Fischer

Costume designer: Trayce Gigi Field

Editor: Jake Pushinsky

PG-13, 100 minutes

Source: Hollywoodreporter