Die frisch geschiedene Rafi (Uma Thurman) geht schon auf die 40 zu, als sie sich in den wesentlich jüngeren Dave (Bryan Greenberg) verliebt. Der Alterunterschied ist noch das geringste Probl... Alles lesenDie frisch geschiedene Rafi (Uma Thurman) geht schon auf die 40 zu, als sie sich in den wesentlich jüngeren Dave (Bryan Greenberg) verliebt. Der Alterunterschied ist noch das geringste Problem, als sich herausstellt, dass Dave der Sohn von Rafis Therapeutin Lisa (Meryl Streep) is... Alles lesenDie frisch geschiedene Rafi (Uma Thurman) geht schon auf die 40 zu, als sie sich in den wesentlich jüngeren Dave (Bryan Greenberg) verliebt. Der Alterunterschied ist noch das geringste Problem, als sich herausstellt, dass Dave der Sohn von Rafis Therapeutin Lisa (Meryl Streep) ist.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Rafi, the lovely woman at the center of the action, has gone through a painful divorce. Is she ready for another deception? No, she is much stronger now, and with the help of Lisa, her therapist, she will know better how to deal with anyone that might try to play with her feelings.
Enter David, the young hunk of a guy, who likes what he sees when he meets Rafi, casually, one night while waiting to go in to see a film at Cinema Village. Indeed, Rafi is all what any young man could wish for. Not only is she gorgeous, but as it turns out, she is a bit older. But does that matter at all? No way!
Lisa is Rafi's therapist. In fact, she is a bit surprised to find that Rafi has fallen for a younger man. She advises her to take a chance and see where it goes, but be careful not to be hurt again. The only thing is she has no clue it's her own son who is involved in the romance.
The question of ethics come into play as Liza agonizes she is not doing the right thing with her patient, something that has to be worked with her own therapist. Not only that, but Lisa, as well as her Jewish family expects David to stay within his own when he picks the girl he will marry.
"Prime" is light and works well because of the work of the three principals. Uma Thurman is the ideal actress for playing Rafi. Not only is she a gorgeous woman, but she is an actress who never gives a false note in the character she is portraying. Meryl Streep is also at her best in playing the therapist. Bryan Greenberg plays David with ease and makes him comes alive.
In spite to have gone to see the film without any expectation, we found the film light and entertaining thanks to Ben Younger's direction.
I'm sure you know the typical rom-com. Two people meet, have a great time together, something gets in the way, they break up, they get back together, and they get married and have lots of sex and babies and everything is just wonderful. Well this is different. Halfway through you are just positively convinced that this is how Prime is going to end. But it doesn't. That's all I'm going to say; see for yourself.
Meryl Streep was hilarious as the Jewish mother/shrink. I loved her. Besides the un-clichéd ending, she is the highlight of the movie.
Overall I thought this was a really good movie. It was one of the few movies where I didn't look at the clock to figure how much time there is left of the movie. It was entertaining and cliché-free. I really enjoyed it and I highly recommend it.
I wish more of "Prime" had been about this relationship, the one between Thurman and Streep. As it is, the movie feels like it has two separate halves that the young director/writer Ben Younger doesn't successfully bring together into a comprehensive whole. The rest of the film follows Rafi and her boyfriend as they try to build a relationship despite the age difference. Nothing about this half of the movie is new or fresh, and Younger never convinced me why I should care. I was too distracted by the fact that he had a wonderful actress like Streep in his film and didn't seem to know what to do with her.
"Prime" is far from a bad film, and given its indifferent reception when it was released in theatres, I actually expected it to be worse than it was. But it is a rather half-baked film, and not one you need to spend a lot of mental energy on, which in this case is a criticism, because it raises a lot of interesting ideas that it never explores.
Grade: B-
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesRafi is 37 years old; Dave is 23. This may be a joke on the movie's title, as 37 and 23 are both prime numbers (i.e., numbers that are divisible only by themselves and by 1). In real life Uma was 35, Bryan was 27
- PatzerIn the final scene, the door windows at the restaurant are covered with snow/frost but no other windows have the same condition including other buildings and cars.
- Zitate
David Bloomberg: I'm 23.
Rafi Gardet: No, you're not. I don't believe you. Let me see the license... Oh, my God! You're a child. Taxi! I have t-shirts older than you.
- VerbindungenFeatured in At the Movies: Folge #2.41 (2005)
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Couchgeflüster
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 22.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 22.827.153 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 6.220.935 $
- 30. Okt. 2005
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 67.937.494 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 45 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1