Down with Love

  • Germany Zum Teufel mit der Liebe! (more)
Trailer

Plots(1)

Barbara hits 1962 New York City with her new book, "Down With Love," a pre-feminist manifesto saying "no" to love and "yes" to career, empowerment--and sex. As Barbara's revolutionary tome rockets to the top of the best-seller charts, she becomes the target of ace journalist Catcher "Catch" Block, ladies' man/ man's man/ man about the town, who is determined to take her down. Catch's best friend and boss, the neurotic and lovesick Peter McMannus, tries to rein in his star writer, while haplessly pursuing the object of his affections, Vicki Hiller, Barbara's brilliant and feisty editor. Vicki plays tough in a man's world, which includes her old style chauvinist boss, Theodore Banner. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (4)

DaViD´82 

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English A stylised comedy gently parodying the classics of the "Golden Age of Hollywood", with decent dialogues, and though it loses pace here and there, that flowing duo makes up for it. And that's about it, that's all it offers, but qualitatively it's enough for excellent romantic entertainment. ()

gudaulin 

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English I don't give a damn about love parodies, it both mimics the golden 60s and the film production of big American studios from that time. Moreover, it also makes fun of fashionable feminism and the gender movement. More could certainly have been extracted from that material, the film does not belong to those that would appear in the top rankings, but the pleasant and functional cast makes it an attractive spectacle. Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor simply belong to the top and it shows. Overall impression: 70%. ()

D.Moore 

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English This comedy/parody/tribute is (along with the Austin Powers films) one of the most charmingly stylized films I've seen in years. From the opening logos of 20th Century Fox and CinemaScope, to the animated credits, the exuberant Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor, the colorful costumes and color-coordinated sets, the music that plays almost all the time and complements the action in the film exactly the way it used to be done, little things like the use of rear projections during car rides, the huge windows of the hotel rooms and the obviously painted New York behind them, to a really beautifully wacky script full of lots of wacky characters and gags and a final twist or musical numbers... Everything is so stylish and the atmosphere of those (mostly) black-and-white lemonade romances oozes so much from everything that it's simply irresistible and lovers of the genre (by which I don't mean contemporary romantic comedies) shouldn't hesitate for even a second. ()