A hunky TV news cameraman named Steve (Bradley Cooper, hot off of surprise hit The Hangover) gets stalked by a lonely crossword puzzle creator named Mary (Sandra Bullock, in a career resurgence after The Proposal) in the comedy All About Steve. Although only one screenwriter is credited, All About Steve
feels like it's been clumsily patched together from a dozen different
versions of itself. The story makes no sense and there's very little
that resembles recognizable human behavior...and yet, for that very
reason, the movie exerts a perverse fascination. Some parts are actually
funny--Thomas Haden Church (Sideways), as a reporter hungry
for an anchor position, unleashes arias of manipulative babble--but most
of the movie is just baffling. The filmmakers seem to think they're
sending a heartwarming message about embracing yourself, no matter how
out of the mainstream you may be. Unfortunately, all of the "quirky"
people come across as brain-damaged because they're not really people,
they're emblems of "uniqueness." Mary is meant to be endearingly
eccentric, yet her social ineptness verges on schizophrenia or severe
autism. At every turn, All About Steve unintentionally reminds
the viewer that someone wrote this, that someone thought this bit of
behavior or this turn of phrase would somehow make us like this
character or find them charming. Unfortunately, that someone was very,
very off the mark. The result--seeing the bald intentions under the
failed result--is a jarring yet oddly compelling experience. Also
featuring DJ Qualls (Hustle & Flow) and Katy Mixon (Eastbound & Down).



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