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November 22, 2009
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Home > Movies > Reviews > 2009 |  
The Proposal
| posted 6/19/2009




The Proposal

Our rating: 3½ Stars - Good

Your rating:  

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

Genre: Comedy, Romance

Theater release:
June 19, 2009
by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

Directed by: Anne Fletcher

Runtime: 1 hour 47 minutes

Cast: Sandra Bullock (Margaret Tate), Ryan Reynolds (Andrew Paxton), Mary Steenburgen (Grace Paxton), Craig T. Nelson (Joe Paxton), Betty White (Grandma Annie)

Related: Talk About It/Family Corner


Contrived is almost too soft a word for the premise of The Proposal, Sandra Bullock's latest romantic comedy offering, yet the fresh dialogue, gorgeous scenery, and ultimately winsome love story make this one of the most appealing romances to come down the pike in recent years.

Bullock plays Margaret Tate, a hard-as-nails book editor in the vein of Meryl Streep's iconic Miranda Priestly from The Devil Wears Prada. She's so loathed and feared that her employees send out frantic instant messages warning of her impending arrival in the office. "The witch is on her broom." But unlike Anne Hathaway's bumbling, lost Andie from Prada, Margaret's assistant is skillful, competent, ambitious Andrew Paxton. As played by Ryan Reynolds, Drew has confidence to spare and has managed to stay a step ahead of Margaret's wrath for three years.

Ryan Reynolds as Andrew, Sandra Bullock as Margaret
Ryan Reynolds as Andrew, Sandra Bullock as Margaret

Margaret has just scored the coup of a lifetime by convincing her most reclusive author to appear on Oprah. It's a career-making move, but Margaret's triumph is cut off at the knees when she's called into the publisher's office. It seems that Margaret, a Canadian, flouted US immigration by traveling to the Frankfurt book fair while her work visa was expired. She's being deported. Her career is over.

Now, in true romantic comedy silliness, Margaret's urgent problem presents an immediate solution when Drew steps in with a phone message. He told the caller Margaret was "otherwise engaged," and Margaret's kohl-rimmed eyes narrow with a nefarious plot worthy of Queen Cleopatra herself. She announces that she and Drew are engaged to be married. Problem solved.

Drew has no desire to go along with Margaret's scheme until she points out that his career will be toast if he doesn't. It's not because Margaret will ruin him. Once deported, she can't work for an American company. Rather, her successor will fire him because he was Margaret's assistant.

Margaret drags Drew down to the US immigration office where she jumps the line. Immigration officer Mr. Gilbertson (a marvelous Denis O'Hare) smells a rat and urges Drew to reconsider a move that could land him in prison for five years. All he has to do is admit the truth. Drew says the truth is that they're in love and getting married and are spending the weekend in Alaska to share the news with his family. But before they get on the plane, Drew enacts a promise from Margaret that she'll promote him to editor.

Betty White (right) is hilarious as Andrew's 'Gammy'
Betty White (right) is hilarious as Andrew's 'Gammy'

And thus, after the most calculating of courtships, the conniving couple travels by first-class plane, puddle jumper, and motorboat to Drew's utterly gorgeous family mansion in the mouthwatering Alaskan wilderness. They've got it all worked out—stay married just long enough to get immigration off their case, then a quickie divorce and they'll forget it ever happened.

Any savvy movie watcher will guess what will happen over the course of the film. This is a romantic comedy starring two very attractive people who happen to have great chemistry together. But screenwriter Peter Chiarelli pulls off both an absurd premise and a formulaic plotline—and then some. Beneath the flippant veneer lurks a movie that takes matrimony and family quite seriously. Margaret and Drew are led to place of reverence for marriage that compels them to make good on the casual promise that they made when Margaret "proposed" to Drew. Her journey from ice queen to blushing bride ends up being surprisingly moving.

That's not to say that The Proposal is heavy handed or soggy. On the contrary, it's good comedic fun the whole way through. Director Anne Fletcher uses a light hand and keeps things moving, while screenwriter Chiarelli peppers Drew's dialogue with unexpectedly fresh quips. As Margaret and Drew study for their immigration quiz, to prove how well they know each other, Drew asks Margaret if she has any hobbies. "Besides snacking on children while they dream," he adds.

Craig T. Nelson as Andrew's father
Craig T. Nelson as Andrew's father

The stabs at broad physical comedy mostly hit the mark. The movie trailers feature a scene where Margaret and Drew end up crashing into each other while stark naked. The setup actually works, though Fletcher's camera lingers a bit too long on Bullock's artfully covered nude body. This seemed an odd choice and a departure in a film that largely feels modest, almost unfashionably so. The flashes of skin in this scene are all that keep The Proposal from being a worthy companion film to the classic It Happened One Night, skirting immorality from an ultimately chaste position.




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[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: 

Displaying 1 - 3 of 26 comments.See all comments
Allie   Posted: October 18, 2009 4:31 PM
This movie was GREAT!!! My mom, older sister and I went and saw this, and we laughed the whole time. The characters were funny, the actors did a good job, and the storyline was great!

Christine   Posted: October 17, 2009 4:30 PM
Not rated
This movie was really bad. I was expecting this to be very funny because everything Sandra Bullock's done has been excellent. (IMHO) All the situations are pressured, predictable and incredibly dumb? I was shocked that such a talented cast would compromise themselves to be in a movie this ridiculous. All I can figure is they needed a paycheck? Don't waste your time.

terri   Posted: October 16, 2009 9:12 PM
I loved this movie~it is very funny and witty. I don't often buy movies but I told my kids that I want this movie for Christmas. It says a lot when you want to see a movie more than once!

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