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February 13, 2012

Home > Movies > Reviews > 2009
Couples Retreat
Four married couples seek therapy on a tropical island in a comedy that is neither all that believable or all that funny.






Couples Retreat

Our rating: 1½ Stars - Weak Your rating:


Your Comments: see all

MPAA rating: PG-13
(for sexual content and language)

Genre: Romantic Comedy

Theater release:
October 09, 2009
Directed by: Peter Billingsley

Runtime: 1 hour 47 minutes

Cast: Vince Vaughn (Dave), Malin Akerman (Ronnie), Jon Favreau (Joey), Kristin Davis (Lucy), Jason Bateman (Jason), Kristen Bell (Cynthia), Faizon Love (Shane), Kali Hawk (Trudy), Jean Reno (Monsieur Marcel), Peter Serafinowicz (Stanley), Carlos Ponce (Salvadore)

Related:
Talk About It/Family Corner


Officially, Couples Retreat is all about romantic partners and their efforts to stay together no matter what, with the help of some unconventional counseling on a faraway island. But in some ways, the most interesting duo here is Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau, two buddies who have co-written and/or co-starred in several films and, in doing so, have moved through several life stages together, often with Vaughn in the lead and Favreau playing back-up: first they were roving bachelors in Swingers, then Vaughn played the single guy who falls in and out of love with his girlfriend in The Break-Up, then they were married brothers in Four Christmases, and now, in Couples Retreat, Vaughn is not only a married man but a devoted father, too. It won't be long before he's warding off a whole new generation of would-be swingers and walking his daughter down the aisle.

Vince Vaughn as Dave, Malin Ackerman as Ronnie
Vince Vaughn as Dave, Malin Ackerman as Ronnie

Perhaps surprisingly, Vaughn's character, Dave, also happens to be one of the healthiest people around in Couples Retreat, as is Dave's wife Ronnie (Malin Akerman). Their family life may be a little dull, and they may be coasting on autopilot to some degree, but they seem reasonably balanced, and they seem to genuinely care about each other. Their friends, however, are in much rougher shape: Joey (Favreau) and Lucy (Kristin Davis) have both developed wandering eyes and are all too eager to cheat on each other (the trailer is more explicit about the fact that they have been cheating on each other; some of that footage apparently ended up on the cutting-room floor); Shane (Faizon Love) has just come out of a messy divorce and has hooked up with a girl half his age named Trudy (Kali Hawk); and Jason (Jason Bateman) and Cynthia (Kristen Bell) have been so stressed out by their efforts to have a child that they are now on the verge of breaking up.

But not to worry, Jason and Cynthia have a plan: to save their marriage, they will go to an island retreat that provides couples therapy, called Eden West. The only catch is that they can't afford to go unless they pay the group rate and convince all their friends to come with them. Oh, and everyone has to be ready to go in just one week.

Jon Favreau as Joey, Kristin Davis as Lucy
Jon Favreau as Joey, Kristin Davis as Lucy

This being a movie, everything falls into place very quickly—indeed, too quickly. Some of the character bits here do have the ring of truth: the scene where Dave and Ronnie talk themselves into going on the trip by discussing how they never really had a honeymoon, and how their marriage became overwhelmed by family matters from a very early point, rang true for me, at least. (My wife and I had twins before our first wedding anniversary, and life hasn't slowed down since.) But then the contrivances pile up, as Jason pays them a late-night visit, and the kids wake up and say the sorts of precocious things that children never say anywhere but in the movies, and Jason tells Dave he's so influential among their friends that if he agrees to go on the trip then all of their other friends will tag along too.

And so they do—only to discover, when they get to the island, that the couples-therapy part of the retreat is not optional. So it is not only Jason and Cynthia who have to talk to a counselor and engage in exercises designed to build up their relationship, but everyone else as well. (Yes, this includes Shane and Trudy, even though they have only known each other for a few weeks.) And, surprise, surprise, while the dysfunctional couples vent their frustrations, even the seemingly functional couple—Dave and Ronnie—begins to feel the strain after a rather skeptical therapist (John Michael Higgins) digs into their file.

Somewhere in all of this, there is the potential for a pretty good comedy, but this movie isn't it. Perhaps it's because not one of the four couples gets enough story time for us to really care about them, or perhaps it's because the jokes range from the tepid to the obvious. The recurring sense of déjà vu certainly doesn't help: seeing Kristen Bell wrestle with relationship issues on a tropical island cannot help but bring the much funnier Forgetting Sarah Marshall to mind, and seeing Kristin Davis come on to her male masseuse or ogle a naked yoga instructor cannot help but feel like a pale retread of Sex and the City.




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[Reader Reviews]

Displaying 1–3 of 5 comments

Dan

October 23, 2009  3:51pm

Great show funny drawing large audiances. Somewhat crude. Nice positive ending.

Sarah Louise

October 21, 2009  3:03pm

This movie made me laugh. And that is why I go to the movies, to laugh, or to cry, or to feel something. This movie delivered. Yes, it's a bit crass, so I wouldn't recommend it to my parents. But the lack of nudity or sex scenes was welcome. And yes, it's one of the most pro-marriage movies I've seen in a very long time.

Towson

October 20, 2009  10:52am

I saw this a bit differently than the critic. The theater audience frequently laughed out loud when I saw it. There are lots of very funny little bits, gags, and lines. My wife and I came out chuckling and happy. Ultimately, it has one of the most pro-marriage endings of any film I've seen in a long time. That said, this is not high literature. There is a lot of crass humor along the way, and much of it related in some respect to sexual relationships or lust. It is absolutetly not for kids. I agree with the critic that it's not a movie for new couples to watch on a date. But if you're married, have faced some of the bumps in the road, like seeing a bit of dumb humor, and ultimately want a marriage-affirming happy ending, this is worth seeing. Frankly, I suspect it might be better watching in the theater atmosphere with other people laughing than seeing it at home by yourself on DVD.

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