The Object of My Affection
When confronted with a film as relentlessly PC and romantically feel-good as
The Object of My Affection, you eventually have to succumb. Especially when it
boasts wry, knowing performances, smart dialogue, mostly subdued direction from
The Madness of King George's Nicholas Hytner, and -- despite its four reprises
of "You Were Meant for Me" on the soundtrack -- a firm grip on the protean
vagaries of contemporary relationships.
Based on local author Stephen McCauley's novel, the film begins with George
Hanson (Paul Rudd, a kind of darker Matthew Broderick) being consoled by Nina
Borowski (Jennifer Aniston, discovering life beyond perkiness) over his
break-up with boyfriend Dr. Joley (Tim Daly) and taking her up on her offer to
be her roommate. The inevitable friend/lover tension sets in, not to mention
the blurry borders of sexual preference (it's not as if George had never slept
with a woman), all complicated by Nina's pregnancy, the return of Joley, and
the appearance of a hunk named Paul. Such cute-hip machinations can induce
squirming, but it's encouraging when a scene about a Hispanic elderly woman
whose daughter is a lesbian is actually funny. That and impeccable supporting
performances from Alan Alda, Allison Janney, and George's Nigel Hawthorne make
Object not only desirable but satisfyingly obscure.
-- Peter Keough
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