After her husband, Carl, suddenly leaves, Joline travels from New York to Texas to track him down. Although Joline tries to remain upbeat, she is discouraged when she discovers that Carl already has a new girlfriend, the lovely Carmen. Familiarizing herself with Carl's new home and friends, Joline gets company in the form of her brother, Jay. Will Joline win Carl back, or are there other romantic possibilities on her horizon?
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I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Heather Graham is a fine actress but this film seems to dance around a plot. She played Joline, a newlywed New Yorker, whose husband leaves her after two years of marriage. She finds him in El Paso, Texas where she stalks him.Committed is not about being married but about being committed to an asylum. The film has Joline account for the events which led up to her time in a mental hospital. She is believable in her role. The cast includes Casey Affleck and Luke Wilson who played her photographer husband.I will be honest that I didn't care for the film too much. True, it's an independent written and directed by Lisa Krueger but I just didn't get it like a message or reason for it's inception. Still it's an enjoyable comedy and drama.
From what I remember seeing of this film, it was not good. I always say that if a film is good and can keep you attention throughout the hardest of moments (example: a Tylenol Cold & Sinus war) than it is a film that has done its job. The fact that I was asleep for most of this film only proves the fact that it could not keep my attention, and ergo, it did not complete its job. Why did I fall victim to the Tylenol Cold & Sinus, when I had a film in my arsenal? To begin, Committed did not make any sense. The acting was poor and the overall story left more doors opened that just couldn't be closed. I am thinking of the moment when I swear I saw Affleck and Graham (brother and sister in this film) kissing. That didn't make any sense. Then there was a scene with Affleck and his roommates indicating that he was sleeping with one of them, almost breaking up a perfect lesbian couple. I suppose this was to show that most are not as committed to a relationship as Graham is, but for me it just was nothing more than filler. I have this suspicious feeling that the director of this film was sleeping with Affleck. His acting in this film was atrocious. I mean, I have never seen him do any "good" acting, but this was by far the worst. Oh, I just had another moment during the battle come through my mind and I confirmed it with IMDb.com ... what was John Stewart doing in this film? That was yet again another moment when my eyes were opened just for a moment in one of those battles that seemed to last forever.And frankly, it's Heather Graham - we could care less about her after a while. She's just not interesting - she's just bland, boring and basically stops acting after a while. While they desperately start throwing wacky characters into the mix to revive the movie, it just doesn't work and instead of just calling it a day - they start throwing more characters into the mix so now it's just weird, tedious, boring and really, really long. Luke Wilson's slow drawl acting style slows an already crawling movie to dead halt - why exactly were these two married? Committed is a truly terrible film--the kind of "hip comedy" that leaves you staggering out depressed and bored.Grade: * out of *****
COMMITTED (2000) **1/2 Heather Graham, Casey Affleck, Luke Wilson, Goran Visnjic,Patricia Velasquez, Summer Phoenix, Clea Duvall, Kim Dickens, Alfonso Arau, Mary Kay Place.They say marriage is an institution and to paraphrase the retort to that one-liner, `And I'm much too young for an institution' (BA DUM DUM!) In filmmaker Lisa Krueger's sophomore effort she proves you don't have to be crazy to be married but it helps.Joline (the fetching Graham) is a concert promoter for a small venue in New York City whose 2 year marriage to budding photojournalist Carl (Wilson, in another variation of his corn-pone dudes) is facing a `crisis of faith' when Carl inexplicably deserts her while traveling on business leaving her to come to terms even when she throws a birthday party for him (`it's been 8 months since his last one' she states matter-of-factly) inviting all their good friends and her brother Jay (Affleck) who tries to help her with a postcard from Carl indicating he's more or less out west trying to get his thing together. Taking this as a cue to get her man back and salvage their relationship she rents a car and embarks to the desert landscapes of America enduring many hardships (including a drive by robbery attempt while fixing a flat tire with humorous results) and inspired sleuthing (she literally holds up the postcard with it's visage of a cactus trying to hone in exactly where Carl sent it from!)By a fluke of good luck Joline discovers her estranged spouse working in El Paso for the local paper but learns his dream of being a passionate artist has gone unexplored since he's still shooting stills of food. Pacing herself (and fooling herself in the process) to wait for the right moment to spring herself upon him she follows him back to his dusty new dwelling on a border town existence and sits in her car waiting in the heat.Along for the wait is Carl's next-door-neighbor, Neil, a hunky outspoken artist (played by `ER's resident sex symbol Visnjic) who immediately hits upon his newly found friend and possible sexual conquest. In no uncertain terms he sits next to her car in a fold out chair, sipping from a thermos and speaking his thoughts to her; specifically what he'd like to do with her. Joline doesn't seem entirely fazed by this but doesn't dissuade his charm. What works in this deceptively clever screwball comedy is the wide-eyed intensity of Graham, the latest independent film queen, who just seems to get bigger and better (she was a riot in last year's hysterical Steve Martin/Eddie Murphy Hollywood sendup `Bowfinger') whose determination to do anything to keep her marriage intact despite all odds against her is something of a small marvel in witnessing someone slowly sink into desperation and borderline madness for the one they love.Krueger, whose `Manny & Lo' from several years ago was the darling of The Sundance Film Festival, has some of Jonathan Demme's panache in depicting everyday characters in unlikely situations with the air of menace about them but allowing them to remiain intact even if it seems bleak.Also noteworthy are sexy newcomer Velasquez as Carmen, Carl's would-be new girlfiend, a Mexican waitress who fast becomes Joline's good friend, suggests a silkier version of Sandra Bullock, and director Arau (`Like Water For Chocolate') - making a rare acting appearance - as Carmen's mystical grandfather who guides the addled Joline not unlike a Zen Ben Obi-Wan Kenobi via a ritualistic guideline of luring her man back. And I especially liked one of the sexiest scenes I've seen in years when Visnjic tells Graham to close her eyes and unbeknownst to her lets his hand travel hover across the countours of her sexy outline while Glenn Campbell's classic `The Wichita Lineman' plays quietly from her blistering car; magical.The only problem with the film is there aren't that many gut-busting scenes but then again this isn't exactly supposed to be `The Naked Gun'. It only falters near its end when Joline finds herself literally the title of the film. Until then it's a nicely paced journey of self-discovery in realizing that what doesn't kill you only makes you stronger.
This is an unusual movie in that Jolene (the wife) uses positive and constructive solutions most of the time yet it is also quite realistic.The title "Committed" has is intentionally ambiguous. It refers to both being committed, as in to her husband and to things, and to being put into an institution. I am grateful that the institutional commitment is not as much of the movie as I was hoping it was not. The movie is more of an adventure than anything else I think.