Reviews of Definitely, Maybe
Definitely, Maybe review
Posted : 4 months, 2 weeks ago on 28 July 2009 10:29
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)Gostei muito desse filme, nao achava q seria tao bom asim !
mais em primeiro lugar eu gostei tanto do filme, tambem por causa das atuaçoes do filme
- Elizabeth Banks
- Isla Fisher
- Rachel weisz
- ryan reynolds
Apesar de Nao ser um filme lancamento , é um filme muito bom ! A HISTORIA é muito comovente , e até me fez Chorar !kkkk
Lindo de mais o Filme !
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Definitely, Maybe review
Posted : 5 months, 4 weeks ago on 13 June 2009 10:43
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)Great romantic comedy. Usually these movies are not very original and after five minutes you already know everything that's going to happen. But this is not the case. You spend the whole movie wanting to know who he's gonna end up with and the end is just sweet and perfect.
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Definitely, Maybe review
Posted : 10 months, 2 weeks ago on 29 January 2009 05:49
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)Great romantic comedy. Cool cast. Rachel Weisz was gorgeous as always. Ryan Reynolds played well his role and Abigail was sooo cute. And i happy April and Will's happily ever after.
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a great comedy
Posted : 1 year, 1 month ago on 12 October 2008 01:49
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)Will Hayes (Reynolds) is in the process of getting a divorce. His daughter Maya (Abigail Breslin) wants to know how her parents met and fell in love, so Will relives his past by telling her the story. As Will's story shows, he had met 3 girls, 1 of which is Maya's mom. By the end of the story, Maya must figure out which one of the three is her mother.
Great acting. Especially by Rachel Weisz, Elizabeth Banks, Isla Fisher ... and Ryan Reynolds!
A good script, with a lot of unexpected changes. You think you've figured out just WHO Maya's mom is? Think again!
This is a good romantic comedy. Not to be missed.
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Without a Doubt!
Posted : 1 year, 2 months ago on 9 October 2008 07:54
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)''I wanna marry you because you're the first person that I wanna look at when i wake up in the morning and the only one I wanna kiss goodnight, because...the first time that i saw these hands i couldn't imagine not being able to hold them but mainly when you love someone as much as i love you...getting married is the only thing left to do, so... will you... hum...marry me? ''
''Definitely, maybe... i have to think about it.''
A political consultant tries to explain his impending divorce and past relationships to his 11-year-old daughter.
Ryan Reynolds: Will Hayes
Definitely, Maybe marks a step back from Love Actually's multiple plot threads, opting instead for a brilliantly crafted script played out by a tight ship cast (Kevin Kline was class and very funny in his wee role). Cleverly Definitely, Maybe turns out charisma charged enough not to be soppy, but with lots of loving heart to be touching where it counts.
Screenwriter Adam Brooks, co-writer of Bridget Jones: The Edge Of Reason and Wimbledon, so assured behind the camera. Maybe it's the unblemished array of vision but beyond a over indulgent voice-over and an odd musical interlude over the opening credits, there's barely a trace of the problems that beleaguered his previous workings.
Ryan Reynolds as Will Hayes results in a acting talent with a beautiful combination of charm, a penchant for comedy, and good looks. He's been repeatedly stuck with bad roles like Blade:Trinity and the flat Smoking Aces but this romance movie shows his talent in spades.
Like most good ideas, Definitely, Maybe has a true similarity to life and love, like a modern remake of the classic Princess Bride, where the child is told a story.
Little Miss Sunshine's Abigail Breslin is the kind of adorable whippersnapper who knows she doesn't have to act too much and though she's still growing up, she applies the same sweetness and naivety that bagged her an Oscar nomination in last year's ceremony.
If there's a fault, it's maybe the seesaw of attention divulged to the three women in Will's life: college sweetheart Emily (Elizabeth Banks), free spirit April (Isla Fisher), and ambitious intellectual Summer (Perfect Rachel Weisz). All three play gracefully and beautifully, but they're not given a huge amount of screen-time, which soon reveals where the story is leading. That is, however, a minor criticism so definitely, maybe unjust to complain.
There's something about Definitely, Maybe that the inclusion of both Rachel Weisz and Clint Mansel's music that increases and makes my heart really pulse. A fleeting, distant, connection to my favourite film The Fountain that echoes around my feelings for Definitely, Maybe. In a way it has a soul and a message at it's core.
Beautiful.
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Love is in the air
Posted : 1 year, 3 months ago on 20 August 2008 05:21
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)''I wanna marry you because you're the first person that I wanna look at when i wake up in the morning and the only one I wanna kiss goodnight, because...the first time that i saw these hands i couldn't imagine not being able to hold them but mainly when you love someone as much as i love you...getting married is the only thing left to do, so... will you... hum...marry me? ''
''Definitely, maybe... i have to think about it.''
A political consultant tries to explain his impending divorce and past relationships to his 11-year-old daughter.
Ryan Reynolds: Will Hayes
Definitely, Maybe marks a step back from Love Actually's multiple plot threads, opting instead for a brilliantly crafted script played out by a tight ship cast (Kevin Kline was class and very funny in his wee role). Cleverly Definitely, Maybe turns out charisma charged enough not to be soppy, but with lots of loving heart to be touching where it counts.
Screenwriter Adam Brooks, co-writer of Bridget Jones: The Edge Of Reason and Wimbledon, so assured behind the camera. Maybe it's the unblemished array of vision but beyond a over indulgent voice-over and an odd musical interlude over the opening credits, there's barely a trace of the problems that beleaguered his previous workings.
Ryan Reynolds as Will Hayes results in a acting talent with a beautiful combination of charm, a penchant for comedy, and good looks. He's been repeatedly stuck with bad roles like Blade:Trinity and the flat Smoking Aces but this romance movie shows his talent in spades.
Like most good ideas, Definitely, Maybe has a true similarity to life and love, like a modern remake of the classic Princess Bride, where the child is told a story.
Little Miss Sunshine's Abigail Breslin is the kind of adorable whippersnapper who knows she doesn't have to act too much and though she's still growing up, she applies the same sweetness and naivety that bagged her an Oscar nomination in last year's ceremony.
If there's a fault, it's maybe the seesaw of attention divulged to the three women in Will's life: college sweetheart Emily (Elizabeth Banks), free spirit April (Isla Fisher), and ambitious intellectual Summer (Perfect Rachel Weisz). All three play gracefully and beautifully, but they're not given a huge amount of screen-time, which soon reveals where the story is leading. That is, however, a minor criticism so definitely, maybe unjust to complain.
There's something about Definitely, Maybe that the inclusion of both Rachel Weisz and Clint Mansel's music that increases and makes my heart really pulse. A fleeting, distant, connection to my favourite film The Fountain that echoes around my feelings for Definitely, Maybe. In a way it has a soul and a message at it's core.
Beautiful.
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Ryan Reynolds: Who Knew?
Posted : 1 year, 9 months ago on 7 March 2008 06:42
(A review of Definitely, Maybe)Who knew that Ryan Reynolds could go from "2 Guys, A Girl & A Pizza Place" and Van Wilder (and wasn't there a Blade movie, too) into a romantic lead. I liked the format of telling the story to his child with the names changed to make it a mystery to her. I liked that all the characters were likable, and yet flawed. And the way they came together and fell apart was pretty realistic. It did all those things a Romantic Comedy should do; there was romance, there was partings and there was humor. And best of all the humor was not pratfall humor - no falling down, no pies in faces, but smart humor. The movie was nothing extraordinary, but a good solid, likable film.
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