Film Review: Finding Amanda
Bottom Line: A muddled "comedy" abut teenage prostitution.
Jun 23, 2008
Brittany Snow and Matthew Broderick in "Finding Amanda"
Tribeca Film Festival (Produced by Capacity Pictures, Distributed by Magnolia Pictures)
"Finding Amanda," a misguided comedy directed by "Analyze This" writer Peter Tolan, sinks under the weight of some misogynistic jokes. Trying to win laughs by making women appear stupid and crass, it even features a gag about a woman getting raped by a member of her family: "And I thought I was a bad uncle," quips the hero in reply to the news. Why Tolan, who worked on smart and sassy TV shows like "Murphy Brown" and "The Larry Sanders Show," would debut with material that makes even "Larry The Cable Guy" seem sensitive is a mystery.
Boxoffice potential is mediocre. The subject of teenage prostitution just isn't good material for a cheeky comedy. Problems are compounded by a few scenes of drama, including one that features a beating. Suddenly the film isn't a comedy anymore, and that's confusing. A speedy transition to DVD looks probable.
Matthew Broderick plays a TV writer with a gambling addiction who goes to Vegas to save his teenage niece (Brittany Snow) from prostitution. When he gets there, he finds that she enjoys prostituting herself and taking drugs so much, she doesn't want to change. Instead, she thinks he should go into rehab for his gambling addiction.
Cast: Matthew Broderick, Brittany Snow, Maura Tierney, Peter Facinelli, Steve Coogan, Ed Begley Jr. Writer/director: Peter Tolan. Producers: Wayne Rice, Richard Heller. Executive producer: Leslie Tolan. Director of photography: Tom Houghton. Production designer: Erich Schultz. Music: Christopher Tyng. Costume designer: Alexis Scott. Editor: Paul Anderson.
MPAA rating R, 90 minutes.
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