Screen
‘How Do You Know’ is rough but lively
Wed, Dec 15, 2010 (7:30 p.m.)
No, really. Are you sure?
The Details
- How Do You Know
- Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd, Owen Wilson, Jack Nicholson
- Directed by James L. Brooks
- Rated PG-13
- Beyond the Weekly
- How Do You Know
- IMDb: How Do You Know
- Rotten Tomatoes: How Do You Know
As goofily distinctive as its title is forgettably generic, How Do You Know, written and directed by James L. Brooks (Broadcast News, As Good as It Gets), is an undeniable mess. For all its rough patches, however, the film boasts the one element sorely missing from most Hollywood rom-coms: a pulse. Granted, the setup is boilerplate: perky young woman (Reese Witherspoon) must choose between womanizing, commitment-phobic star athlete (Owen Wilson) and sweetly neurotic nebbish (Paul Rudd). Toss in a gender-reversed Say Anything… subplot involving a federal investigation of the company founded by Rudd’s dad (Jack Nicholson), and Brooks has all of the genre’s bases covered—quite apropos for a movie in which two of the three main characters are professional baseball players.
And yet Brooks seems to be bizarrely, often thrillingly unaware of how rote his movie ought by rights to be. Early on, Rudd tumbles down a flight of stairs while talking on the phone to his secretary, then just gets up and continues the conversation with a brief laugh; it’s typical of the film that this moment has no narrative significance whatsoever—it just happens. Later on, Witherspoon visits a therapist (played by an unbilled Tony Shalhoub), immediately leaves, returns to ask him for one nugget of all-purpose advice, and upon receiving it, motors again, whereupon the movie promptly forgets that this exchange ever happened. Such randomness may frustrate those who like their movies machine-tooled, but it gives How Do You Know a novel, sometimes exhilarating sense of being reinvented on the fly, like a jazz musician riffing semi-recognizably on an old standard. Hollywood could use more messes like this one.
-
Wednesday
2012-05-30
The Strip
An Intimate Evening with Santana: Greatest Hits Live – Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow
-
Wednesday
2012-05-30
$150 bottle specials
Hot Spots
-
Wednesday
2012-05-30
Drink Specials
- More ›
-
Thursday
2012-05-31
reduced price drinks on Thursday nights
Hot Spots
-
Thursday
2012-05-31
The Orleans
-
Thursday
2012-05-31
Green Valley
- More ›
-
Friday
2012-06-01
Concert
-
Friday
2012-06-01
Henderson
-
Friday
2012-06-01
The Strip
An Intimate Evening with Santana: Greatest Hits Live – Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow
- More ›
-
Saturday
2012-06-02
Downtown
-
Saturday
2012-06-02
Local Bands
-
Saturday
2012-06-02
Red Rock Casino
- More ›
-
Sunday
2012-06-03
Concert
-
Sunday
2012-06-03
The Strip
An Intimate Evening with Santana: Greatest Hits Live – Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow
-
Sunday
2012-06-03
$5 drinks with text
The Strip
- More ›
-
Monday
2012-06-04
Sam's Town
-
Monday
2012-06-04
Palms
-
Monday
2012-06-04
Las Vegas Weekly
- More ›
-
Tuesday
2012-06-05
South Point
-
Tuesday
2012-06-05
$3 drinks with a text at the door
The Strip
-
Tuesday
2012-06-05
Activities-farmers market
- More ›
Facebook Activity
Most Popular
- Most Read
- E-mailed
- 1. Photos: Nick Hissom’s debut at Tryst draws Paris Hilton and Lil Jon
- 2. Photos: Van Halen pours out the power at MGM Grand Garden Arena
- 3. Punk Rock Bowling Sunday: Rancid, Oi! originals and the hilarious Blag Dahlia
- 4. Photos: David Guetta’s EBC debut; Tiesto, Reggie Bush, Arianny in crowd
- 5. 2012 Miss USA: Glamour shots, Best Buddies, Gordon Ramsay, Sky Blu
- 6. Punk Rock Bowling Monday: Pennywise, Hot Water Music and fans watching for free
- 7. New after-hours eats Downtown at the Parlour
- 8. Strip Scribbles exclusives: ‘DWTS’ extended, LFL in Australia
- 9. Cherry's Memorial Day Weekend comeback
- 10. Photos: Claire Sinclair toasts 21st at Crazy Horse III; plus, Jessa Hinton
Discussion:
In an effort to increase the dialogue on our stories, we will be requiring Facebook accounts to leave comments on lasvegasweekly.com stories. We believe that Weekly readers are likely to have Facebook accounts already and more apt to comment on this site with that account rather than have to create an account with us. If, however, you do not have a Facebook account, click here to sign up for one. If you have questions, comments or concerns about this new commenting policy, please let us know.
For any other questions related to commenting on Weekly stories, please read our full policy.