BOUNCE
Scott Heller
Say what you will about her snotty attitude, her taste in boyfriends, or that
pink Academy Awards dress, Gwyneth Paltrow remains a wonderful actress -- even
in this wan melodrama, Random Hearts for the Dawson's Creek set,
she shines. As Abby Janello, a harried mother of two whose husband was killed
in a plane crash, Paltrow finds surprising grace notes in writer/director Don
Roos's screenplay. A million times less challenging than his tart 1998
breakthrough, The Opposite of Sex, Bounce sees Roos retreating to
the cozy tone of his earlier efforts, empowerment weepies like Boys on the
Side and Love Field.
As a storm threatens to shut down O'Hare, obnoxious ad executive Buddy Amaral
(Ben Affleck, who else?) hands his plane ticket to a tweedy family man (Tony
Goldwyn) so he can lay over with the gleaming beauty at the next barstool
(Natasha Henstridge). When the plane crashes, a guilt-ridden Buddy feels he has
to barge into the life of the unfortunate widow, a fledgling real-estate broker
getting a start in strip malls, and try to throw some business her way.
Appealingly fragile, Abby blossoms as she and Buddy fall in love. Only his dark
secret and the smarmy smile Affleck just can't shake stand in the way of new
beginnings for both of them. You don't need to be a flight engineer to figure
out where Bounce will land. Watching Paltrow makes the trip a little
less bumpy.
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