A dating blogger who writes under the pen name Luckless, goes viral for a post about a bad date with a single sports agent. When Winnie's boss offers her, her own column, she has no choice b... Read allA dating blogger who writes under the pen name Luckless, goes viral for a post about a bad date with a single sports agent. When Winnie's boss offers her, her own column, she has no choice but to keep dating him for content.A dating blogger who writes under the pen name Luckless, goes viral for a post about a bad date with a single sports agent. When Winnie's boss offers her, her own column, she has no choice but to keep dating him for content.
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The positive characters are Winnie, Ret, and Ty. I wanted to see more of Ty's story, especially actually interacting with Jade. Ret was slightly stereotyped as the out-of-touch old timer boss, but his actions as a mentor made him likeable instead of like the others.
Winnie is probably the best developed character starting out with some small flaws and growing through the story. This is in contrast to Holden's sudden personality shift which is not what I consider character development.
The story combines a lot of what are usually major plot elements. Just to name a couple - reporter assigned to a hit piece which hangs as a secret to near the end. Holden is challenged by Ret to get serious with a girl which has aspects of the stories where the Player accepts a bet to win a girl. There are many others.
The sets and backdrops are atrociously cheap, Just as example - a major league rising star practicing at a neighborhood baseball field with almost no fan seating.
There was one crazy scene that did get a laugh from me and that was the last scene with Inga. But then follow that up with the stupid cliche of Holden and Ty running in slow mo.
I can get turned off quickly by exaggeration comedy especially with a lot of overworked cliche and that's the case here. If you like that kind of stuff, you might like this. These aspects got tamped down some toward the middle of the movie making it a little more pleasant for me.
This movie shares similar plot with spins to "Bad Date Chronicles" (2017) which has superior cast, but it failed in execution with the stupid slapstick comedy in the several scenes. This one doesn't suffer from it. Cast was overall fine but I personally mostly liked Jennifer Gibson. She killed it as Inga! Writing was fine, too except that Brett Donahue played fake Brit and I don't understand why was that even important for the story at all because he could be American or even better Canadian, and that would change nothing for worse at least.
And as every other ROE TV movie, don't watch trailer if you plan to watch the movie as it shows everything!
Here I fall back on one of the few mainstays of Hollywood: kids ruin everything. Almost every film you watch, when there are children involved, they have a hall pass to run amok. It's endearing, it's fun, it's aggravating, it's maddening, it's kids. But is this really how it should be? I'm going on a diatribe, because that's what I am left with after watching 'Luckless in Love'. How many times can this man allow his son to destroy his chances at having a romantic relationship? Enough is enough. This is a testament on how adults just let their children walk all over everything. Our current society, our current culture, the whole world is falling apart as a result. Ok, done with the lecture.
The movie is about a British man who lives in the USA with his teenage son. The man is a player and he falls in love with a romance writer of a magazine. It's a match made in hell. Eventually they see past the veneer of social pressures and facades that each of them must maintain. At this point stuff gets real, and the gloves come off. She has a deadline and he is the bottom line, he has an agenda, she is the trophy girlfriend. But these negative qualities in each of them are magnified only due to false pretenses and and missed opportunities. But the final act of this story is very fulfilling and that's why I really enjoyed 'Luckless in Love'.
This is not so bad a film and the current 5.8 rating is absolutely wrong for an audience like myself. I'm seeing a personal trend in rating patterns as I watch more and more films. Interestingly, the ones that fall into the 5.9 to 6.3 range are usually the worst, but 6.4-6.7 are the best. Anything 6.8 and above is hit or miss, the politics and agendas kick in at that point and it's a flip of the coin. Likewise, anything below 5.9 is a flip of the coin, because again politics and agendas sway these ratings in the opposite direction (and apparently my ideologies align more with movie flops rather than blockbusters). I'm finding that I enjoy these 5.0 type movies a whole lot more than anticipated.
Liam MacDonald (Ty) and Glen Michael Grant (Ret) were best among the cast, along Maria Ricossa (Yvette). MacDonald was natural and very believable as Ty.
Hamilton, ON, Canada seems to be the hub for the latest films, shoot exteriors on major cities and set them in Hamilton, cities look a lot alike.
Did you know
- TriviaThe mask that Inga is putting on in her office is obviously dry. This will not work.
- GoofsAround the half of the movie, Holden takes Winnie to the baseball field because its his job and passion. He puts helmet on her head and give her a bat. He even pitched a ball to her from a mound. However, the baseball field was actually softball field (mound is flat - in baseball mound is elevated), her helmet and bat were also softball one, and Holden even pitched ball like in softball (underhand).
- Quotes
Kyra: OK. Don't freak out.
Winnie Rhodes: OK.
Kyra: Inga would like to speak to you in her office alone right now.
Winnie Rhodes: Why? Why? Why? Why?
Kyra: I don't know. She just insisted that I send you to see her when you got in. Maybe she just wants to talk about your fiction work.
Winnie Rhodes: You think, really?
Kyra: No, I'm sorry I just try to make you feel better and I'm really stressed out.