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'Playing It Cool' Review (1 Viewer)

Yavin

Stunt Coordinator
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Sep 15, 2013
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Ben Mk
In short:


What do you get when you take Captain America, Falcon, Mr. Fantastic and Venom, and you throw them all into a rom-com together? You get Playing It Cool, a film that has nothing to do with superheroes and everything to do with writer's block and unrequited love. It in, Chris Evans plays a writer struggling to complete his rom-com screenplay while trying to woo the woman of his dreams (played by Michelle Monaghan). But despite its modern twists, it's really just an old-fashioned romantic comedy at heart. Your average moviegoer's mileage may vary, but for rom-com addicts looking for a fun evening at the movies, Playing It Cool fits the bill.


Highlights from my full review:

None of this should be terribly unfamiliar if you've seen the Danielle Radcliffe/Zoe Kazan romantic vehicle The F Word, which covered more or less the same ground, only with a tad more emotional resonance. The difference is that The F Word was more concerned with the moral ambiguities of its lead characters' relationship and told its story from both the male and the female perspective. Playing It Cool, on the other hand, is much more one-sided, as director Justin Reardon and screenwriters Chris Shafer and Paul Vicknair make the story all about how our male protagonist finds his heart and learns how to follow it.

The movie does have a leg up on The F Word in one major department, though. And that's its cast, who all have a ridiculous amount of chemistry with one another. Whether it's Evans' loveable-asshole routine, Monaghan as the down-to-earth girl next door, or Anthony Mackie's cocky quipping, you can count on one thing: Playing It Cool is loads of fun to watch. Factor in Patrick Warburton as a smug charity-goer, then top it off with Topher Grace, Aubrey Plaza, Martin Starr and Luke Wilson as our writer's inner circle — and primary source for hilariously inappropriate advice — and it's all just icing on the cake.

Reardon also throws in a few other entertaining touches along the way that help to give the overall effort some personality. For example, sporadic fantasy sequences in which our writer imagines himself as the characters in other people's tales of romance, scenes in which we see his heart — manifested as a chain-smoking version of himself in a black suit — mocking him from afar, or the way the movie puts its own little twists on tried-and-true rom-com clichés. But Playing It Cool never fully leverages these unique moments, so for the most part, they end up falling by the wayside as the story plays out to its predictable conclusion.

Film rating: 3 out of 5
 

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