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‘Overboard’ Film Review: Flimsy Remake Lacks Buoyancy

  • The Wrap
To be filed under “not great but more charming than anyone might expect,” Rob Greenberg’s “Overboard” offers a bilingual, generally serviceable remake of the 1987 Goldie Hawn-Kurt Russell comedy of the same name.

Reversing idea of the original — she’s a struggling single parent, he’s a spoiled playboy — Anna Faris and Eugenio Derbez (“How to Be a Latin Lover”) lack the instant chemistry of their predecessors, but a game ensemble of supporting players bring the silly story to surprisingly vibrant life after stumbling awkwardly through a preposterous convergence of circumstances required for its premise to feel remotely believable.

Faris plays Kate, an Oregon widower preparing to be a nurse; she supports her three daughters by delivering pizzas and working for a cleaning service. Leonardo (Derbez), the irresponsible heir to a construction supply empire, lives out Hugh Hefner fantasies aboard his $60 million yacht while his sister Magdalena (Cecilia Suarez) tries to wrest control of the family business. After refusing to pay Kate for scrubbing his boat of evidence of his latest bacchanal, Leonardo falls overboard and washes up on the shores of her small seaside town with no memory of who he is or where (or how much money) he comes from.

Watch Video: Anna Faris Fakes a Marriage With Eugenio Derbez in First 'Overboard' Remake Trailer

Frustrated at her ne’er-do-well brother, Magdalena pretends Leonardo is dead, leaving him in the hospital so she can claim their father’s company. Meanwhile, Kate discovers his plight when it’s reported in the local paper; she allows herself to be persuaded by best friend Theresa (Eva Longoria) to exact revenge on her pompous former employer by pretending Leonardo is her husband, enabling her to force him to cook, clean and tackle household chores while she’s busy studying.

With the help of her daughters and a community of friends and co-workers only too happy to lie for her, Kate convinces Leonardo to come home with her, and the two soon settle into an unexpectedly harmonious partnership as he begins to discover the meaning of real responsibility and to learn the value of a family bound together by love instead of money.

See Photos: 12 Movie Remakes With Gender-Swapped Leads, From 'His Girl Friday' to 'Overboard'

Greenberg’s background is mostly in sitcoms (“Scrubs,” “How I Met Your Mother”), which may account for how broadly and clumsily the set-up portion of this story is handled. Without quite needing to consult actual reality, one might think that Greenberg and his co-screenwriter Bob Fisher (working from Leslie Dixon’s original concept) might have updated, or at least refined, some of the foundational ideas that were scarcely convincing three decades ago. In fact, acknowledging the previous movie as inspiration for the characters in this one might have been a better way to justify what sounds by any definition like a wildly inappropriate criminal act, even if Kate’s gaslighting of Leo feels vaguely like a subversive gesture in the #MeToo era.

The problem is that Kate is written far too appealingly, and Faris is just too loveable to pull off the kind of grand manipulation that might have turned this rom-com scenario into an act of political vengeance. Fundamentally — and I mean this as a compliment — Faris lacks the righteous anger required for this long-suffering blue-collar worker and single parent to perpetuate the kind of deception into which she settles so easily.

Similarly, Derbez throws himself into playing an insufferable prick in the first act, but it takes little more than a scene or two for him to recognize the challenges of manual laborers who use his company’s products and to begin to respect the efforts of the people who actually have to prepare food and clean up after themselves and others.

See Photos: 'Overboard' Star Eugenio Derbez StudioWrap Portraits (Exclusive)

That said, there is a truly magnetic couple in this film sidelined by all of this plot: Longoria’s Theresa and her husband Bobby, played by “Last Man on Earth” secret weapon Mel Rodriguez. Maybe it’s because they come to Kate’s aid so naturally, but they truly feel like a duo capable of the kind of manipulation required to yank a rich jerk out of his or her life and give him the kind of wake-up call to reality that would put him through ridiculous humiliating paces and make him grateful — and even fall in love — by the end of it.

Aside from casting the massively popular Mexican star Derbez, the movie additionally wears its multilingual intentions on its sleeve in multiple scenes where, delightfully, Leonardo’s family members speak to one another exclusively in subtitled Spanish, and later, his construction-worker colleagues make a few pointed jokes at the expense of the privileged white dudes who hire them to dig out their pools.

But even as a welcome offering to audiences from a broad variety of ethnic and economic backgrounds, “Overboard” ultimately feels like one of the dinners that Kate assigns Leo to cook for his newfound family — a good effort with a few new surprises to spice up a familiar dish, but nothing special enough to truly transform it into more than a routine meal.



Read original story ‘Overboard’ Film Review: Flimsy Remake Lacks Buoyancy At TheWrap
See full article at The Wrap »

Ed Asner Attends 2nd Annual AutFest Film Festival

Sony Pictures Entertainment, ABC’s The Good Doctor, Netflix’s Atypical, and several filmmakers were honored for their contributions to autism awareness “From Spectrum to Screen” by the Autism Society of America at the 2nd Annual AutFest International Film Festival (April 28-29), held at the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills.

Ed Asner at 2nd Annual AutFest Film Festival

Credit/Copyright: Mathew Imaging

AutFest screened over 16 feature films, shorts and television programs that promote autism awareness and/or are made by autistic filmmakers.

Seven-time Emmy winner and autism advocate Ed Asner presented Sony Pictures Entertainment with the AutFest Visionary Award, bestowed upon Jeff Frost, President of Sony Pictures Television Studios, and Co-Presidents of Sony Pictures Television Chris Parnell and Jason Clodfelter at the festival’s closing reception. ABC’s The Good Doctor and Netflix’s Atypical received Spotlight Awards, honored for their exceptional portrayal of autism in a positive light
See full article at Look to the Stars »

Cobra Kai Review: Karate Kid Sequel Does More Than Just Wax Nostalgic

With the TV landscape absolutely flooded with reboots and revivals right now, I wouldn’t blame you for raising a skeptical eyebrow in the direction of Cobra Kai, the new Karate Kid sequel series debuting today on YouTube Red. But patience, Daniel-san: Based on the two episodes I’ve seen, what seems at first like a cheap cash grab is actually a fresh, funny spin on the well-established Karate Kid formula, as well as a surprisingly heartfelt and nuanced look at the immense power the past can hold over us.

To be fair, I am precisely the target audience for
See full article at TVLine.com »

TVLine Items: Busy Philipps Talk Show, Strange Angel Trailer and More

Busy Philipps‘ delightful Instagram stories are getting the TV treatment.

E! has ordered Busy Tonight (working title), a talk show hosted and executive-produced by the Cougar Town actress, our sister site Deadline reports.

The program will feature comedic commentary and interviews, as well as behind-the-Instagram-stories segments.

In other E! pickup news, the network has greenlit a docuseries starring singer Ashlee Simpson-Ross and her husband Evan Ross, in addition to announcing the return of the E! True Hollywood Story franchise.

Ready for more of today’s newsy nuggets? Well…

* CBS All Access has released a trailer for its upcoming drama series Strange Angel,
See full article at TVLine.com »

TVLine Items: Sarah Chalke Goes to College, Casey Wilson's Pilot and More

TVLine Items: Sarah Chalke Goes to College, Casey Wilson's Pilot and More
Sarah Chalke is enrolling in Netflix’s Friends From College.

The Scrubs alumna — who currently recurs on ABC’s Roseanne revival — will appear in a major arc during Season 2 of the streamer’s comedy series, our sister site Deadline reports.

The show follows a group of pals from Harvard who are facing down their 40s. Chalke will play a Park Avenue Wasp and divorced mother who briefly dated Nat Faxon’s Nick in college. The exes reconnect at a party in the season opener. (Fun fact: Friends From College also stars Cobie Smulders from How I Met Your Mother, on
See full article at TVLine.com »

AutFest Film Festival Announces Final Program Lineup

AutFest International Film Festival announced its official program selections for its second annual film festival celebrating autism awareness “From Spectrum to Screen.”

Presented by The Autism Society, AutFest will screen over 16 feature films, short films and television programs that promote autism awareness and/or are made by autistic filmmakers. As previously announced, AutFest will also honor Netflix’s hit show “Atypical” and ABC’s “The Good Doctor” with Spotlight Awards for their special portrayal of lead characters who are on the autistic spectrum. The Visionary Award will be presented to Sony Pictures Entertainment’s Jeff Frost, President of Sony Pictures Television Studios, and Co-Presidents of Sony Pictures Television Chris Parnell and Jason Clodfelter. AutFest takes place Saturday, April 28 – Sunday, April 28, 2018 at the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills, CA.

The 2nd Annual AutFest International Film Festival is proud to present the following features, shorts and television programs to play in its 2018 program.
See full article at Look to the Stars »

TVLine Mixtape Throwback Edition: Our Favorite Songs From Grey's Anatomy, Friends, The Sopranos and More

Don’t stop believin’, and hold on to that feeling… of when a new TVLine Mixtape comes out!

This time, we’re throwing it back to some of our favorite songs from iconic TV moments. We’ve collected a six-pack of memorable TV tunes, complete with artist and album info so that you can add them into your permanent collection.

So peruse our playlist, and then hit the comments with your favorite TV jams! And remember: You can always submit questions or suggestions about TV music on Twitter @maggiekgorman.

Series And Episode | Family Ties, “The Real Thing”

Title | “At This
See full article at TVLine.com »

The Muse: How Actress Cristin Milioti Made Her Mark Playing Unusual Roles

The Muse: How Actress Cristin Milioti Made Her Mark Playing Unusual Roles
Despite any attempts to the contrary, Cristin Milioti has no interest in being put into a box. In the course of her relatively brief career, she's taken on a wider variety of roles and disciplines than many actors do in decades. She's made her mark on television, in movies and onstage, playing instantly iconic (and wildly different) characters in Black Mirror, Fargo, How I Met Your Mother, and the Broadway musical Once, to name a few. Currently, she's recording her first album. And this is only the beginning.

"Variety definitely attracts me.
See full article at Rolling Stone »

First Wives' Club Remake Gets Series Order at Paramount Network

Paramount Network is ready to become a full-fledged member of the First Wives’ Club.

The basic cabler is moving forward with a half-hour adaptation of the 1996 film, bypassing the pilot stage and ordering 10 episodes before it’s even been cast, according to our sister site Deadline.

The remake will take place in New York City and chronicle a sisterhood of diverse women who find strength in each other — and engage in a little revenge — after their marriages fall apart.

This is the second attempt to get a TV adaptation of First Wives’ Club off the ground. The series was initially
See full article at TVLine.com »

Anthony Carrigan (HBO’s ‘Barry’) as henchman with a heart of gold steals scenes from ‘SNL’ veteran Bill Hader

Anthony Carrigan (HBO’s ‘Barry’) as henchman with a heart of gold steals scenes from ‘SNL’ veteran Bill Hader
One of the biggest scene-stealers for this TV season is Anthony Carrigan, who plays a mobster alongside “SNL” veteran and Emmy nominee Bill Hader in HBO’s buzz-worthy “Barry.” Audiences are already noticing his star-making turn as NoHo Hank, a bald, tattooed Chechen thug that also happens to be a polished henchman with a heart of gold.

If he is on the Emmy ballot this summer, voters love in the comedy supporting categories when a person is a flamboyant, over-the-top character. Just ask Tituss Burgess (“Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”), Jeremy Piven (“Entourage”), Neil Patrick Harris (“How I Met Your Mother”) and Sean Hayes (“Will & Grace”), who were all Emmy nominated early on in their respective shows’ runs as standout comedic talents, often out-shining their lead actors.

SEEBill Hader (‘Barry’): Top 3 reasons he could be a hit with Emmy voters

The critics agree that Carrigan is force of nature on “Barry.
See full article at Gold Derby »

Which Beloved Shows Have Overstayed Their Welcome? – IndieWire Critics Survey

Every week, IndieWire asks a select handful of TV critics two questions and publishes the results on Tuesday.

This week’s question: What’s a show you enjoy (or have enjoyed more in the past) that has had a good run, but it’s high time it wrapped up and ended?

(This is inspired by the adorable “New Girl,” which kicks off its final season on Tuesday this week.)

Damian Holbrook (@damianholbrook), TV Guide Magazine

Someone please stick a screwdriver into the head of “The Walking Dead.” It’s done everything it needs to do and has been excellent at most of it. But my god, enough. And this is coming from someone who watched “Desperate Housewives,” “Glee,” “Teen Wolf,” and “Pretty Little Liars” all the way to their finales.

As admirable as Rick’s crusade to keep hope alive amid all of the sweatiness, no one has come up with an antidote,
See full article at Indiewire »

People are afraid to eat loud snacks while watching A Quiet Place

  • The AV Club
Look, I get it. The episode of How I Met Your Mother I most relate to is the one where Lily is called out for being a loud chewer, and it sounds like everything she munches on comes from Ace Hardware. Often I will take my bag of Cheetos and go skulk off to try to quietly eat it in the corner of the office kitchen like…

Read more...
See full article at The AV Club »

“Mom” Renewed for Season 6. Will The Show Bring on More Female Directors?

“Mom”

We haven’t seen the last of Christy and Bonnie Plunkett. The mother-daughter duo are set to return for a sixth season on “Mom,” The Hollywood reporter confirms. Anna Farris and recent Oscar winner Allison Janney topline the CBS sitcom, which recently wrapped filming on its fifth season.

Farris plays Christy, a single mom who moves to Napa, California to start over with her two children. Still working on addressing her past of drug and alcohol abuse, she lands a job as a waitress and attends Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Bonnie, who is portrayed by Janney, is also a recovering addict. Janney’s taken home two Emmy Awards for her role on the series, which just celebrated its 100th episode.

“‘Mom’ has been a linchpin comedy for us over the last several years,” CBS Entertainment president Kelly Kahl said Sunday in a statement. “It’s a fearless series that tackles
See full article at Women and Hollywood »

What multi-camera sitcom will get an Emmy nomination for Best Comedy Directing: ‘Will & Grace,’ ‘Roseanne,’ ‘Big Bang’ … ? [Poll]

What multi-camera sitcom will get an Emmy nomination for Best Comedy Directing: ‘Will & Grace,’ ‘Roseanne,’ ‘Big Bang’ … ? [Poll]
For the first time in seven years at the Emmys, a multi-camera comedy will be nominated for Best Comedy Directing — because a new rule mandates it. One slot is now reserved for the multi-camera contender that receives the most votes. The revised rule book that the Emmys published last month actually states that nominees will be proportional to the number of single-camera versus multi-camera submissions, with at least one slot reserved for each type, but it has been at least a decade since there have been enough relative multi-camera submissions to theoretically unlock a second slot.

SEEour video slugfest discussing the new rule and other comedy races.

The Emmys have been gradually switching to proportional nominations in recent years; this is the highest-profile category to adopt it. Best Half-Hour Production Design has been the only race to proportionately nominate based on single-camera versus multi-camera submissions for the past four years
See full article at Gold Derby »

First Wives' Club: New TV Remake Gets Pilot Order at Paramount Network

The First Wives seem to have nine lives.

A First Wives’ Club TV adaptation has scored a pilot order at Paramount Network (fka Spike), our sister site Deadline reports. The half-hour comedy will be based on the 1996 film starring Bette Midler, Goldie Hawn and Diane Keaton, which was itself an adaptation of Olivia Goldsmith’s 1992 novel.

The potential series will take place in New York City and will chronicle a sisterhood of women who find strength in each other — and engage in a little revenge — after their marriages end.

If you feel like you’ve heard this all before, that
See full article at TVLine.com »

Jennifer Morrison on Exploring the World of an Outsider in Her Feature Debut “Sun Dogs”

Sun Dogs

Interview by Kelsey Moore Johnson

Jennifer Morrison is an actress, producer, and director. Her acting credits include “Once Upon a Time,” “How I Met Your Mother,” and “House.” She’s the founder of Apartment 3C Productions. Her short film, “Warning Labels,” premiered at the 2015 Tribeca Film Festival. “Sun Dogs” is her feature directorial debut.

Sun Dogs” premiered at the 2017 La Film Festival and will be available to stream on Netflix starting April 6.

W&H: Describe the film for us in your own words.

Jm: The actual synopsis description for the film is the following:

Intellectually limited from an accident at birth, Ned Chipley has failed time and time again at achieving his dream of “saving lives.” After a fourth thwarted attempt to join the marines, he pairs up with young runaway Tally Peterson. Together, they surveil a group of young men who they mistake as terrorists. Their misadventures
See full article at Women and Hollywood »

17 Unforgettable TV Character Introductions From Supernatural, Buffy, Grey's, Himym, Lost and More

17 Unforgettable TV Character Introductions From Supernatural, Buffy, Grey's, Himym, Lost and More
Some characters just know how to make an entrance. Take Nicollette Sheridan’s Alexis, for example, who recently made her Dynasty reboot debut in grand fashion, much like her predecessor Joan Collins did on the original series.

In honor of the diva’s (second) first appearance, TVLine is looking back at the small screen’s most memorable intros, featuring faves from Supernatural, Lost, The Vampire Diaries and more. (With one presidential exception, we avoided main characters whom we met in series premieres.)

Some arrivals were long-awaited, like How I Met Your Mother‘s titular mama, while others came as a
See full article at TVLine.com »

Stuck In the Middle Cancelled at Disney Channel After Three Seasons

Disney Channel is no longer Stuck In the Middle.

The single-camera comedy, headlined by Jenna Ortega, will come to an end after three seasons, our sister site Deadline reports.

The series, which starred Ortega as the middle child in a bustling family of seven kids, will air its third and final season beginning this summer. Ortega hinted at the show’s conclusion in a tearful Instagram video (see below).

The actress will now transition into the ABC comedy pilot Man of the House, starring Alyson Hannigan (How I Met Your Mother) and Leslie Bibb (Gcb, Popular) as two recently divorced
See full article at TVLine.com »

One Day at a Time Renewed for Season 3

Netflix isn’t ready to sing “Cielito Lindo” to One Day at a Time just yet.

The streaming service announced Monday that it has picked up the critically acclaimed sitcom for a 13-episode Season 3. The renewal comes roughly two months after the release of Season 2.

The modern-day remake of the beloved Norman Lear comedy follows a Cuban-American family led by a recently divorced, former military mom (recent TVLine Performer of the Week Justina Machado), who is raising two teenagers — Elena and Alex — with the help of her traditional Cuban mother Lydia (Egot winner Rita Moreno). Lear serves as an executive producer,
See full article at TVLine.com »

Neil Patrick Harris Talks the Future of ‘A Series of Unfortunate Events’ and Revisiting ‘Doogie Howser’

Neil Patrick Harris Talks the Future of ‘A Series of Unfortunate Events’ and Revisiting ‘Doogie Howser’
With all due respect to Barney Stinson, Doogie Howser, Hedwig and his id alter-ego in the “Harold & Kumar” films, Neil Patrick Harris believes that Count Olaf in “A Series of Unfortunate Events” is the role he was born to play.

“It’s certainly in my wheelhouse,” Harris tells Variety. “And the wheels have more spokes than I anticipated.”

Count ‘em: The versatile Harris acts, sings, dances, uses a bit of slight-of- hand magic — and does it all in various elaborate costumes — as the sinister uncle to three orphaned kids in the darkly whimsical Netflix series based on Lemony Snicket’s
See full article at Variety - TV News »
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