![]() Rosalee clearly leaves an impression on Tad, who later impulsively shows up at the Piggly Wiggly to continue things with Rosalee. The date itself is a gently depicted meeting of a hunk who’s in love with his own self-image and a distinctly non-city woman who’s a bit tongue-tied but has a sharp built-in b.s. as pic’s depiction of West Virginia bears to the actual state, and the movie’s overall phony sense of place (lensing was entirely, and all too obviously, in Southern California) depletes the comic energy and contradicts story’s extolling of genuine feeling over false fronts. Her arrival at the movie capital bears as little resemblance to the actual L.A. Meanwhile at the Piggly Wiggly in the West Virginia town of Fraziers Bottom, Rosalee works with Cathy at checkout Pete impresses as manager but can’t manage to tell Rosalee he loves her.īoth girls enter the contest for a date with Hamilton and Rosalee wins. They come up with a contest whose prize is a trip to Los Angeles and an evening with Tad. Tad’s agent and manager, both who are named Richard Levy (distinguished in credits as Levy the Driven, played by Nathan Lane, and Levy the Shameless, played by Sean Hayes), nervously sense the need for their top client to regain his clean-boy image. Assumption that Hamilton is as nice off screen as on is abruptly contradicted by a cut to Tad indulging in a scandalous night that becomes tabloid fodder. The gals are in tears and Pete checking his watch. ![]() 1 heartthrob Tad Hamilton (Josh Duhamel). ![]() Rosalee and her best pals Pete (Topher Grace) and Cathy (Ginnifer Goodwin) watch an imagined Hollywood romance titled “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” and starring No. And for fans of Bosworth’s charismatic surfer chick in “Blue Crush,” her softer side here reveals a young thesp with more than one dimension. While Bosworth’s Rosalee Futch, a naive, fetching supermarket clerk momentarily seduced by Hollywood, isn’t the memorable creation summoned by Reese Witherspoon, she refreshingly recalls a more innocent style of romantic comedy recently shoved to the sidelines by the gross-out showboaters. With this follow-up to his first feature, “Legally Blonde,” director Robert Luketic is starting to corner the market on comedies centered on lovable if ditzy blond beauties.
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