When In Rome



Product Description
New Yorker seeks out love with an old custom in Rome.Amazon.com
Oh, type-A, über-focused, tightly wound New York Career Girl, will you never learn? Kristen Bell, the growing darling of romantic comedies, crisply portrays the working gal whose life is super organized and rewarding–except for the pesky lack of a real boyfriend. What will it take to loosen her buttoned-down drive and open her heart to a chance at love? Well, when you’re as tough a case as Bell’s Beth, you’re going to need the heavy artillery: Italy. When Beth visits Rome for the wedding of her sister, Joan (Alexis Dziena, Entourage‘s Ashley), she’s suddenly awash in the city’s romance. She visits the famous fountain d’amore and retrieves coins from it, hoping for magic. When in Rome succeeds because it allows reality to coexist happily with that magic–which brings forth several potential suitors for Beth. Bell is a delightful actress and brings nuance and depth to a role that’s rather two-dimensional. Her suitors include Jon Heder, Danny DeVito, and Josh Duhamel, who plays Nick, a wiseacre hunk with a brain behind that self-effacing nature. When Beth suddenly has five men in love with her–one for each coin–she wonders if Nick’s feelings are real, or just the fountain’s crazy magic. Duhamel and Bell have an appealing, old-fashioned bantery chemistry, and if the audience knows well before Nick and Beth that they are perfect for each other, well, the journey is pleasant and the leads are engaging. DeVito is hilarious, and other great cameos belong to Anjelica Huston and Peggy Lipton. Fans of films like My Big Fat Greek Wedding, as well as fans of Bell and Duhamel, will have fun When in Rome. –A.T. Hurley

When In Rome

Related Posts with Thumbnails

download When In Rome or watch When In Rome online
This might be on hotfile or rapidshare

5 Comments so far »

  1.  

    K. Blankenship said

    May 7 2010 @ 2:59 PM

    So, I realize that I am writing this right when it shows up in theaters, but I decided to go ahead and rate the movie based on the actual movie (not the DVD), because alot of times I will go on here to see what other people are saying about the movie, before I go see it. So, I decided to do that for this movie. :)

    Overall, I enjoyed When in Rome. It’s a great chick-flick.

    When in Rome tells the story of Beth (Kristen Bell) who, while visiting Rome for her younger sister’s wedding, realizes that she may never actually settle down because no man has ever ranked above her job. So, in a drunken craze, she visits the Fountain of Love and removes several coins from the fountain’s water. This brings five guys (Will Arnett, Jon Heder, Dax Shepard, Danny Devito, and most importantly Josh Duhamel) into her life…all of whom have fallen madly in love with her. She has to figure out a way to break this spell, while also trying to figure out whether or not some of those feelings may be for real.

    As I said, overall it was an enjoyable movie. It is one of those movies that you have to accept that it’s not supposed to happen in real life. I mean, it’s all about magic and falling in love with the right people. It does have funny enough parts to keep a guy entertained, but it is definitely a chick flick that I recommend. It made me want to visit Italy and find this so-called Fountain of Love. :)
    Rating: 4 / 5

    Report Spam/Abuse

  2.  

    Anonymous said

    May 7 2010 @ 5:25 PM

    After the heavy stuff of “Twilight” and “The Notebook”, one gets the faint longing to just go see a brief, light, and funny love comedy that you can just settle back and let the day’s events wear away as you laugh. This is one of those movies.

    When my friend said what we were going to see, I realized I’d only seen posters of the movie and had no idea what it was supposed to be about. But I agreed to go, because everyone deserves a night away from our over-bearing parents (: and when we left the theater, I decided it was better than I thought it would be.

    You probably already know the basic plot: a pretty, lonely and single girl goes to her sister’s wedding in Rome and realizes she might just be like that forever: single. A drunken frenzy leads to a splash in a magic fountain outside the church, where the girl, Beth, grabs a handful of coins tossed into the water, hoping for love. Immediately, she unknowingly attracts several men ranging from self-absorbed guy model to a delightfully creepy magican, all the while slowly falling in love with a totally different man, Nick Beamon.

    So a rather off-beat plot, but laced with some funny situations and cute moments between Beth and Nick, it is pleasing and amusing while just being light and mild enough to satisfy your nightly theater visit. Like I said, it’s a small film that I hadn’t heard of before going to the theater, and though while not Oscar-worthy, it’s a sweet, friendly, predictable flick that will keep any couple interested… until the smooching takes over. ;P
    Rating: 4 / 5

    Report Spam/Abuse

  3.  

    Diana F. Von Behren said

    May 7 2010 @ 7:18 PM

    In Mark Steven Johnson’s “When in Rome,” crisp, size negative 1 Kristin Bell (Veronica Mars – The Complete First Three Seasons) plays a cute workaholic curator for the Guggenheim Museum–you know the type–she’s upset when she doesn’t get cell coverage, has a natural cynicism regarding love, has a zany efficiency that borders on fanaticism yet always manages to pull it all together fashion-wise in a few seconds. In short she is supposed to epitomize the strong workingwoman with a weakness for love in the typical romantic comedy. Unfortunately as chin-up determined as she might be, she does not hold a candle to actresses like Melanie Griffith in “Working Girl” or even Rosalind Russell in “His Girl Friday” whose comedic timing and insouciant charm seem polished in comparison.

    This observation, however, may not be due to any fault of Ms Bell’s. The script written by David Diamond and David Weissman attempts to be perky, sweet and LOL funny along the lines of “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” but succeeds only in offering its audience a big screen version of made-for-TV Hallmark Movie Channel Family fare with stale jokes, stereotypical characters and goofball scenarios fueled by a supernatural occurrence that takes place in a love fountain in the Piazza Navona in the Eternal City. Shades of La Dolce Vita (2-Disc Collector’s Edition) and a poor man’s Trevi! As Beth, Ms. Bell really doesn’t have a chance; she along with sister Joan (Alexis Dziena) and assistant Stacey (Kate Micucci) come off as being so incredibly young rather than the young professionals/newlyweds that they are costumed to be. With such weak sugarcoated material their performances cannot be rated only enhanced with contrived overblown expressions more suitable to the stage than film.

    The plot follows the usual rom/com formula where girl meets boy and then wonders for the duration of the film whether the boy in question (Win A Date With Tad Hamilton! (Widescreen Edition) Josh Duhamel) actually has real feelings for her. In “When in Rome” (which oddly takes place primarily in New York) when Beth does the reverse Trevi and pulls coins out of the fountain, little does she know that each coin is associated with a particular male looking for love. In a series of whacky sequences that strain comedy to its limits, the four lovelorn men in question (Danny DeVito, Will Arnett, Jon Heder, and Dax Shepard) chase her about town to the point in which she needs to beat them off with a stick. Although the fifth man, Nick played by Duhamel romantically dodges lightning bolts to be at her side, there is little development of his character. In fact, we know little about Beth or Nick-their backgrounds are blank as are their dreams and aspirations. We see Beth with her parents–the mother a bitter divorcee and her father played by a Don Johnson that has passed the point of wearing his scruffy Miami Vice stubble to any great advantage–but is her broken home to blame for her frenetic efficiency? Her rather crazy move to get into a fountain in a foreign country in an evening gown? The script has little depth beyond a contrived zaniness that gives the story no bearing.

    Not that that is not okay. It all depends on the target audience and what they expect. Two hours of whimsy? `When in Rome’ would have played better as “High School Musical In New York and Europe.” Then no question would arise as to its intended audience for surely, this film is geared towards a young adult crowd that enjoys a bit of magic a la Teen Witch mingled with G-rated Disneyesque romance. “When in Rome’s” greatest failure is its pretence as a grown-up comedy. The sophisticated writing that would give it the feel of a `Working Girl’ or `Big Fat Greek Wedding’ simply is not there.

    Bottom Line? “When in Rome” provides about an hour and a half of mundane entertainment for the less than 25-year-old set. Leads Bell and Duhamel cannot be blamed for bad performances as the script does not afford them much range. Recommended for the lovers of family fare Hallmark Movie Channel style.

    Diana Faillace Von Behren

    “reneofc”

    Rating: 2 / 5

    Report Spam/Abuse

  4.  

    Craig Whittle said

    May 7 2010 @ 8:39 PM

    WHEN IN ROME

    STARRING: Kristen Bell, Josh Duhamel, Angelica Huston, Will Arnett, Jon Heder, Dax Shepard, Alexis Dziena, Kat Micucci and Danny DeVito

    WRITTEN BY: David Diamond and David Weissman

    DIRECTED BY: Mark Stephen Johnson

    Rated: PG – 13

    Genre: Romantic Comedy

    Release Date: 29 January 2010

    Review Date: 21 March 2010

    Kristen Bell is adorable and Josh Duhamel is a blast and their chemistry together was entertaining; but I wish I’d seen it in a different film. When in Rome is just one more romantic comedy to give me less hope for this genre that’s tragically desperate for some creative new ideas.

    Kristen Bell is our character of highest interest in the film as Beth. She is a career woman with no time for a man in her life, as a busy art curator for a big museum in New York.

    She manages to sneak away for a brief moment to Rome however, for her sister’s wedding. At this wedding, she meets the charming man, whom she isn’t aware, is no doubt the one of her dreams. Duhamel plays the leading man, Nick.

    Despite Nick’s more than obvious immediate interest in Beth, she is oblivious to this and finds herself drunk and complaining that no-one will ever love her. She ends up at a majestic touristy water fountain in the streets of Rome, where she removes five coins from its watery temple. The second she does this, five guys immediately fall in love with her. Well four for sure, the other may have already been headed down that road on his own and besides – he threw a poker chip into the fountain rather than a coin, so does this really count? The fifth guy is of course, Nick.

    When Beth goes back home to New York, she is soon stalked by all five men, to include Nick, although he does so in a more subtle and somewhat charming fashion. The other four guys yearning for her attention are played by Danny DeVito, Dax Shepard, Jon Heder and Will Arnett.

    DeVito plays a sweet famous sausage king; Shepard is a hilarious male model who is absolutely full of himself; Heder is a screw-ball magician who will bother you but make you grin; and Arnett plays a loony Italian artist. All of them grovel over her and naturally, she only has eyes for Nick, but of course can’t let him onto that, because -well, the movie would be over, I guess.

    I’m not sure why the film needed to have these four psychos following Beth’s every move, but on the other hand what would have taken their place? Maybe they added to the film in some obscure way. I do get the feeling that they all had more depth to them than our two main characters, and that is just as ridiculous as the four of them in general.
    Rating: 2 / 5

    Report Spam/Abuse

  5.  

    Haunted Flower said

    May 7 2010 @ 9:38 PM

    Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R1SDP0LNZCJJXU Gina from Haunted Flower reviews the movie “When In Rome” directed by Mark Steven Johnson and starring Kristen Bell and Josh Duhamel in a rom-com about taking coins from a fountain and attracting stalkers.

    [...]
    Rating: 2 / 5

    Report Spam/Abuse

Comment RSS

Leave a comment

Name: (Required)

eMail: (Required)

Website:

Comment: