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May 26, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2005
Rumor Has It...






Rumor Has It...

Our rating: 2½ Stars - Fair Your rating:
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MPAA rating: PG-13
(for mature thematic material, sexual content, crude humor and a drug reference)

Genre: Comedy

Theater release:
December 25, 2005
by Warner Brothers

Directed by: Rob Reiner

Runtime: 1 hour 36 minutes

Cast: Jennifer Aniston (Sarah Huttinger), Kevin Costner (Beau Burroughs), Shirley MacLaine (Katharine Richelieu), Mark Ruffalo (Jeff Daly), Richard Jenkins (Earl Huttinger), Mena Suvari (Annie Huttinger)

Related:
Talk About It/Family Corner



Rumor Has It… is a fairly typical Julia Roberts-style romantic comedy with a clever pop cultural twist that gives the movie a jolt of creativity and thematic depth. The typical part: The main character faces great fear about her current relationship, sees the alternative and makes a decision in the end. The clever concept: She learns that her deceased mother, too, wrestled these doubts … and it was all captured in a classic movie.

The movie starts in early 1960s Pasadena. Tedious and forced narration explains that there was once a young man seduced by the middle-aged wife of his father's business partner. He also spent a romantic weekend with the woman's daughter before she married another man just a week later. The entire event was then captured in Charles Webb's 1963 book (and later, movie) The Graduate and began a whirlwind of talk among the gossipy socialites of Pasadena: Is the story true? Who are the real-life Robinsons?

Jennifer Aniston stars as Sarah, who is terrified of going through with her marriage plans
Jennifer Aniston stars as Sarah, who is terrified of going through with her marriage plans

When the movie shifts to 1997 (a year picked for no apparent reason except to make stale references to Bill Clinton and the dotcom era), we meet Sarah Huttinger (Jennifer Aniston). Newly engaged and unhappy in her career, Sarah struggles to figure out who she is, what she wants in life, and what defines her. This wrestling is compounded by having to go home to Pasadena to a family she feels she has nothing in common with. Her soul-searching becomes an obsession after she realizes that her family could have been the Robinsons: Her mother and grandmother may have shared the same lover. Her mom, like her, may have searched for what real love means. And maybe, just maybe, Sarah is the result of the tryst documented in The Graduate—and that's the reason she never completely fit in with her family.

At its best, Rumor Has It… is the female-counterpart to The Graduate: A search for meaning, love and fulfillment in a world where people use each other to selfishly gain their own gain worth and meaning. The movie overturns typical Hollywood gender conventions by featuring a woman who is noncommittal and searching while her loving and solid boyfriend Jeff (the always spot-on Mark Ruffalo) is left to react to her impetuous whims. Both Sarah and Jeff are well-drawn characters—a tribute to both the actors and director Rob Reiner, who is gifted in creating relatable 3-D people in his films. In this movie, each of his characters represents a significant perspective on life.

Mark Ruffalo as Sarah's boyfriend Jeff
Mark Ruffalo as Sarah's boyfriend Jeff

As this film's answer to Benjamin Braddock (Dustin Hoffman's character in The Graduate), Sarah makes a lot of mistakes in her search for meaning and a place to belong. Her entire journey seems to hinge on defining herself through her parents—trying to differentiate herself from them, attempting to avoid their mistakes, but ultimately committing those same mistakes.

Played with sensitivity and playfulness by Aniston, Sarah is both frustrating and encouraging. She learns valuable lessons about love, commitment, family and self-fulfillment. However, she only learns these things by knowingly making the same errors her mom and grandma also made. While encouraging that both Sarah and her mom eventually graduated to a better understanding of life, it's sad that those lessons only came through tough mistakes. Of course, that's all too often reality. However, the film perpetuates a cultural myth that anything goes if you're trying to "find" yourself—selfish sin is okay if you are on a journey to better self-discovery. One line even says, "If this marriage doesn't work out, you can just get a divorce." This film has opportunities to stand against that mindset, but will it? Will Sarah repeat the sins of the mothers? Will she go as far as they did in their searches? Or will she redeem their mistakes by learning from their example before falling into the trap herself?

Shirley MacLaine as Katharine, Sarah's grandmother—who lets her in on a family secret
Shirley MacLaine as Katharine, Sarah's grandmother—who lets her in on a family secret

Instead, what holds the movie's love story together is Sarah's boyfriend Jeff, who understands what love and commitment mean—and he stands unwaveringly for them. He and Sarah's father (Richard Jenkins) are the film's personifications of true love and forgiveness. If not for the great performances each actor gives, it would be easy to see them as weak or assume their actions make no sense. But as we see them wrestling with decisions and thoughtfully choosing love, they become the real heroes in a story about people acting selfishly, impulsively, and carelessly.




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