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This week, we take a look at the films of Michael Mann. What's your best Mann?

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HOLIDAYS & EVENTS



An Affair to Remember
Scriptwriter and Calvin College grad Geert Heetebrij just released his first full-length film, a delightful romantic comedy called A Foreign Affair. We recently talked with him about the movie.
by Mark Moring | posted 5/18/2004


Every now and then we hear about a movie that's "off the radar screen" but turns out to be a gem. Such is the case with A Foreign Affair, a quirky but fun independent film that opened last week in just three cities: Los Angeles, Phoenix, and—get this—Grand Rapids, Michigan. All three make perfect sense.

Geert Heetebrij
Geert Heetebrij

L.A. makes sense, as the movie capital of the world.

Phoenix makes sense, as the home of A Foreign Affair, a company that takes American men on "romance tours" of Russia in search of potential brides. Apparently works; the website boasts: "We average more than seven engagements a day."

And Grand Rapids makes sense, because the film's scriptwriter, Geert Heetebrij, is a 1993 graduate of that town's Calvin College.

A Foreign Affair, Heetebrij's first full-length feature, is a romantic comedy about two 30-something brothers—Jake (Tim Blake Nelson of O Brother Where Art Thou) and Josh (David Arquette of Scream) live with their mom on the family farm. When Mom dies, the sons realize they're clueless when it comes to cooking, cleaning, and keeping house. So they decide they need a wife—yes, a wife, singular, not plural. And they end up on this romance tour to Russia in search of the perfect woman—Jake, the logical, measured (and anal retentive) big brother with his list of criteria for interviewing prospects, and Josh, the sweet, shy, little brother who suddenly transforms from a homebody into an outgoing playboy while on the tour.

Hilarity ensues, but this film is much more than just a comedy. It's a poignant look at sibling relationships and the mysteries of romantic love. Ebert & Roeper both gave it thumbs-up, and it was well-received at the Sundance Film Festival last year, where one critic called it "partly comic in an absurdist way and partly very human" and "a wry comment on the whole notion of romance tours. … A Foreign Affair is one of the sleeper hits at Sundance."

It's also one of the best movies I've seen this year, so here's hoping it comes to a theater near you. If not, look for it on video some day. In the meantime, Heetebrij, a Christian who now lives in an LA suburb, talked with us about the movie.

How did you come up with the idea for A Foreign Affair?

Geert Heetebrij: I came across the website for A Foreign Affair years ago and thought it was a really bizarre concept, shopping for a spouse that way. I remember thinking immediately that it would be a great arena for a story, but I didn't know what that story might be. Much later, I connected the arena with the characters of the two brothers, and then I suddenly had a story.

Is any of this story based on real characters?

David Arquette and Tim Blake Nelson
David Arquette and Tim Blake Nelson

Heetebrij: Jake and Josh are inspired by two actual brothers living with their mom, although the film brothers end up being quite unlike the actual people who inspired it. And, to my knowledge, they've also never taken a romance tour. But maybe the movie will change that.

Are you reflected in either of the characters?

Heetebrij: I think I have a lot of the rigidness and stubborness of Jake in me. A shorthand way to describe both brothers would be Id and Superego.




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