Monday, March 21, 2011

The proposal - film critic

"The proposal" was one of the best romantic comedies released in 2009. It is rated PG-13.

Margaret Tate (Sandra Bullock) works as an Executive Editor highly placed for a publisher of book highly respected in New York City. Margaret is his work, but people who work for it consider it is cold, pitiless and without regard for them or their feelings. It has a very effective assistant Andrew Paxton (Ryan Reynolds) which manages somehow to follow with it without stop smoking or being fired.

Everything goes well for Margaret until she learns that she is to be deported to the Canada. It seems that it never took time to obtain appropriate documentation to remain in the u. s. She tells about her bosses that she was secretly dating her assistant and that they are engaged to marry. Of course, after marriage, she will become an American citizen and visa issues will disappear.

Once she convinces Andrew thereto is his best interests, they find that INS has posted an agent in their case, who believes that their upcoming marriage is a sham and determined to expose them. Andrew, with the threat of imprisonment suspended overhead, negotiates editor-in-Chief and the publication of his own book work if it goes through with the transaction.

In an effort to appear as a normal couple, engaged, they will visit Andrew in Alaska family. It turns out he grew into a well-to-do family in a small town where everyone knows everyone. She brings to her family and they announce their intention to marry. They remain in the House of his family, where she learns the tension between Andrew and his father, who wants him to resume the family business. Over a short period of time, it grows Andrew and his family who treat him as one of them.

Mother Andrew convince them he should marry at home and they reluctantly agree. Andrew starts to have doubts with respect to deceive his family. Andrew mother (Mary Steenburgen) and Grandma Annie (Betty White) take Margaret in town for a wedding dress fitting. While in the dress shop Grandma Annie Margaret collared family for 150 years.

Meanwhile, the NSI agent Mr Gilbertson has been in contact with father Andrew (Craig t. Nelson). He travels to Alaska to face Andrew and offer once deal to admit that marriage is a sham, and it will go free while Margaret gets deported to the Canada. Cross with her, and he will go to jail. In defiance of his father Andrew told them that the marriage is still.

At the altar Margaret changed its mind, everyone said the truth about their commercial agreement. She flees with Constable in the NSI return to New York and prepare to return to the Canada. Ex girlfriend Andrew spoke with him and he realizes that he is really love Margaret wants to marry. He is trying to catch him until she leaves Alaska, but arrive too late at the airport.

He rushes in New York and she finds office cleaning his things. In front of the entire desktop he said he loves it and it offers. Ultimately, we see them and family Andrew interviewed by Constable in the NSI in its attempt to thwart what he believes still is a false marriage.

My recommendation

Watch the film. I like much Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds, so I knew that I film before I even saw it. And I've done. It's funny, with scenes of great nature and Betty White one native dance dance around a fire in the Woods. More could you want? The chemistry between the main characters was compelling as it was the manner in which they gradually their staff lives with each other.

I also like Craig t. Nelson and Mary Steenburgen and provided great entertainment as Andrew rich parents. Mary has played its role of warm, loving mother also convincing as it did in the past in other movies. Craig was big as a father gruff, no-nonsense who simply wants the best for her child.

Another character, that you'll love is Ramone. He is a man of many talents. See us scraping in him a little less than male hunky away. The only man scraping away the area, apparently. He worked in a store, a cater server and the local Minister.

Related Post:



No comments:

Post a Comment