SCREEN

A Good Year

Jeffrey M. Anderson

Like Cars' Lightning McQueen, Crowe's new character, investment expert Max Skinner, is cocky and successful. Like Lightning, he is accidentally waylaid in a hick town and learns the true meaning of love and family. Scott's strength is in using light and imagery to either trap his characters or to release them from traps. But traps don't have much to do with this material, and the director just seems lost.

Max's turning point comes when he inherits his uncle's French vineyard. He makes a quick trip to see it, but a fall into an empty swimming pool and a meet-cute with a hot French girl (Marion Cotillard) cause him to stick around for a few days. At first, he intends to sell, but a sexy cousin (Abbie Cornish) as well as the comically one-dimensional French staff eventually help change his mind. Max sees his uncle in several flashbacks, giving Albert Finney a chance to shine in that role.

Max is nothing like other stock-trading Masters of the Universe, say, the slick reptile Michael Douglas played in Wall Street. This one is more like Hugh Grant, with floppy hair and big tortoise-shell glasses, bounding down staircases, doing comic double-takes and whipping out self-effacing one-liners. Though Crowe can be charming when he turns on his warmth and humor (see Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World), he's not cut out for cute romantic comedy. When he reteamed with Ron Howard (A Beautiful Mind) to re-create some Oscar glory with Cinderella Man, the effort seemed too obvious. So Scott and Crowe's attempt at this warm, vacation-like movie with wine, beautiful girls and opulent surroundings comes as a refreshing surprise. But attempt and outcome are entirely different things. It could have been carefree and weightless like Under the Tuscan Sun, but A Good Year ultimately places too much strain on Max's predictable redemption rather than redeeming—and freeing—itself.

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