Something New | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sanaa Hamri |
Written by | Kriss Turner |
Produced by | Stephanie Allain |
Starring | Sanaa Lathan Simon Baker Mike Epps Donald Faison Blair Underwood Wendy Raquel Robinson Alfre Woodard |
Cinematography | Shane Hurlbut |
Edited by | Melissa Kent |
Music by | Lisa Coleman Wendy Melvoin Tanisha Harper |
Distributed by | Focus Features |
Release date |
|
Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $11.4 million |
Something New is a 2006 American romantic comedy drama film directed by Sanaa Hamri. It stars Sanaa Lathan and Simon Baker
The screenplay by Kriss Turner focuses on interracial relationships and traditional African American family values and social customs.
Filmed in Los Angeles, it was released in the United States on February 3, 2006.
Kenya McQueen is a successful, single African-American woman who has sacrificed romance in order to pursue a career as a certified public accountant in LA. Her rigid desire for perfection and control has manifested itself in the bland, monochromatic decor of her new home and the rigid rules she follows in her personal life.
Leah wakes up on Valentine's with a nightmare of her supposed wedding going wrong. That evening she has a girls' night out, where they remind each other of the dire stats of their likelihood of getting married. 'Let go, let flow' is a concept the group decides to adopt to increase their chances.
Thus urged to loosen up by her friends, Kenya accepts a blind date with landscape architect Brian Kelly arranged by her co-worker Leah Cahan, who is in the process of planning the kind of wedding Kenya wants herself. When they meet at Starbucks, she is surprised to discover Brian is white. So, she soon excuses herself and leaves.
The two unexpectedly meet again at a party at Leah's parents' home, where Brian landscaped the grounds. Impressed with his work, Kenya decides to hire him to renovate her unkempt backyard garden of her recently purchased home. As time passes, their employer-employee relationship evolves into a friendship and then love.
Although Brian is helping her feel more comfortable about her living environment and herself, Kenya finds it difficult to dismiss her reservations about their romance. The opinions of her girlfriends Cheryl, Nedra, and Suzette, her upper class parents Joyce and Edmond, and her womanizing younger brother Nelson begin to have a deleterious effect. Kenya and Brian then argue one evening when he is unwilling to discuss issues of color, which drives them apart.
Nelson introduces his sister to someone most everyone views as a more acceptable suitor, tax attorney Mark Harper, who has just relocated to Los Angeles. They begin to date, and while Joyce thoroughly approves, Edmond senses his daughter is not as happy as she was with Brian. Everything Kenya thought she wanted suddenly seems immaterial, and nothing Mark does ignites a spark between them.
When the dissonance she's developed finally overwhelms her, Kenya chooses to reunite with Brian, no longer allowing her controlling nature and social norms to dictate matters of the heart.
The film ends with Kenya marrying Brian amongst family and friends, with a wedding reception held in the garden Brian had landscaped for her.
Something New received generally positive reviews from critics. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 61% of 109 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6/10.The website's consensus reads: "Something New tackles serious questions about race and interracial relationships with genuine appeal and an alluring romance that develops as naturally as the plot." [1] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the film a score of 64 out of 100, based on 28 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. [2]
Manohla Dargis of The New York Times called the film "a pleasantly diverting romance ... [in which] the chemistry between the leads is as unmistakable as the setup is contrived ... The lovely Ms. Lathan ... and the similarly attractive Mr. Baker ... don't just look good together; they feel right in sync. Their easy, sensual rapport partly owes something to the generally sure hand of the film's director, Sanaa Hamri, making a fine feature debut, and something else, something indefinable, to the delectable mysteries of two bodies in cinematic motion." [3]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film 3½ out of four stars and commented, "I found myself unexpectedly moved." He continued, "By the end, Something New delivers all the usual pleasures of a love story, and something more. The movie respects its subject and characters, and is more complex about race than we could possibly expect. With this film and the completely different but also observant Queen Latifah comedy Last Holiday , black women are being paid a kind of attention they deserve but rarely get in the movies." [4]
Kevin Crust of the Los Angeles Times called the film "superficial and formulaic but pleasant enough to entertain and qualifies as intelligent and sophisticated by the current standard of Hollywood comedy." He added, "The movie nicely captures the area around Baldwin Hills, is crisply written by Kriss Turner and portrays the upper-middle class black community seldom seen in mainstream TV and film. However, the characterizations, even the leads, rarely rise above archetypes. The film's lack of depth as it oversimplifies the complexities of racism keep it from being anything other than a lightweight date movie." [5]
Ruthe Stein of the San Francisco Chronicle said, "The trouble with the movie is that it sometimes seems at odds with itself, vacillating between a realistic presentation of the obstacles black professional women face finding a suitable mate and another bit of Hollywood fluff where their skin color is glossed over." [6]
Steve Persall of the St. Petersburg Times graded the film B and commented, "I like the way Something New presents facets of African-American life seldom seen in mainstream movies, such as the formality and brief funkiness of a debutante cotillion ball, the affluent sophistication making such events important. I like Hamri's approach to material that might be offensive from a solidly black or white perspective. It all makes the foundational sameness of the story easier to take. The basic story isn't new, but telling it this way is really something." [7]
Brian Lowry of Variety observed, "Wispy at best, this romantic comedy from a first-time director and screenwriter feels as if whole chunks have been left on the cutting-room floor, with what remains mustering intermittent charm thanks to the attractiveness, if not chemistry, of Sanaa Lathan and Simon Baker ... Perhaps the best thing the movie has going for it, actually, is that despite the title, there's really nothing new here at all; rather, the beats are so familiar the audience can fill in the gaps themselves." [8]
On May 16, 2006, the film was released on DVD in Region 1 in two versions, one in anamorphic widescreen and the other in fullscreen format. Both have an English audio track and subtitles in English, Spanish, and French. Bonus features include an introduction by Blair Underwood, The Making of Something New, and The Dos and Don'ts of Dating.
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