The Heartbreak Kid (2007 film)

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The Heartbreak Kid
A woman in the passenger seat making faces at a man driving the car.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeter Farrelly
Bobby Farrelly
Screenplay byScot Armstrong
Leslie Dixon
Peter Farrelly
Bobby Farrelly
Kevin Barnett
Based onThe Heartbreak Kid
by Neil Simon
"A Change of Plan"
by Bruce Jay Friedman
Produced byTed Field
Bradley Thomas
StarringBen Stiller
Michelle Monaghan
Malin Åkerman
Jerry Stiller
Rob Corddry
Carlos Mencia
Scott Wilson
Danny McBride
CinematographyMatthew F. Leonetti
Edited bySam Seig
Music byBill Ryan
Brendan Ryan
Production
companies
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • October 5, 2007 (2007-10-05)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$60 million[1]
Box office$128.5 million

The Heartbreak Kid is a 2007 American romantic dark comedy directed by the Farrelly brothers (who also helped to write the film alongside Leslie Dixon and Scot Armstrong). It is a remake of the 1972 film of the same title and stars Ben Stiller in the main role, Michelle Monaghan, Malin Åkerman, Jerry Stiller, Rob Corddry, Carlos Mencia, Scott Wilson, and Danny McBride. It tells the story of a sports shop owner who ends up in a rushed marriage with a woman and meets a true love interest during a trip to Mexico.

Plot

Eddie Cantrow, owner of a San Francisco sports shop, is single but ambivalent about relationships. He's convinced that he's holding out for the right woman, but raises eyebrows from his father and closest friend by attending the wedding of his former fiancee, who he had previously been with for five years. Eddie feels even more out of place when the "singles table" that his seating arrangement is located at is filled with children of the other invited and obviously-married guests. One day, while witnessing a purse-snatching, he tries unsuccessfully to recover it, resulting in the thief attacking him. He and its owner, Lila exchange pleasantries, and Eddie finds her attractive. He talks to his father about the encounter while working at his store, but also delighted when he sees Lila appearing at his store for shopping. In their next encounter, Lila admits that she didn't come to the store to shop, but actually hoping to see him again.

They begin dating and get serious quickly. Suddenly, Lila announces that her company, where she works as an environmental researcher, is requiring Lila to move to Holland, but her company does not deploy married employees abroad. At the urging of both his father Doc and best friend Mac, Eddie marries her after only dating a few weeks.

Before their wedding night, Eddie and Lila have never been sexually intimate nor spent much time getting to know each other. During the drive to their honeymoon in Los Cabos, Mexico, Eddie learns things about Lila he finds annoying, such as incessant singing.

Arriving at their room, they have sex for the first time and Eddie learns that Lila is extremely aggressive in bed. Arriving at their hotel, they both meet the hotel owner, "Uncle Tito", who is a friend of Mac that was recommended to Eddie. Uncle Tito has a strange sense of humor, but welcoming to Eddie, regardless. Eddie tries to look beyond Lila's recent behaviors, but his disaffection deepens when she divulges her history of substance abuse which resulted in a deviated septum, so she sprays drinks out of her nose. He learns she was only an unpaid volunteer at her environment research company, and the "thief" was an ex that she owed money to. Eddie realizes he made a mistake marrying Lila as he rushed into it. Not in love with her, he can't stand more of her newly-discovered behavior and bad habits.

On the beach, Lila insists on using mineral oil, refusing sunblock despite Eddie's warnings about the sun. She then blames Eddie for her second-degree sunburn that she gets as a result. As the enormity of his mistake sinks in, he meets Miranda, a vacationer with her family from Mississippi. Immediately attracted, Eddie spend most of his honeymoon with Miranda and her family while the sunburn confines Lila to their room. Miranda's family all like Eddie except for her cousin, Martin, who senses he is hiding something. Confiding in Mac, he states he made a mistake marrying Lila and he is falling for Miranda.

Later that same evening, there is a misunderstanding between Eddie and Miranda's family because they hear he came to Mexico to mourn his wife who was killed by a maniac with an ice pick.

Later on, Eddie decides to propose divorce to Lila at lunch, but then Martin and his brother Buzz confront him, with Martin shoving a spicy pepper up Eddie's nose as a result. When Miranda learns about Lila, she accidentally falls into the ocean, Eddie leaps in to save her, and Eddie is stung by a jellyfish afterwards. Lila treats the stings by urinating on him, even with everybody watching. After the chaos, Lila and Miranda both abandon him (Miranda for his lies and Lila for his wish for a divorce). Lila even destroys Eddie's passport stranding him in Mexico.

Eddie sinks into depression, sleeping in a hammock, drinking heavily, and annoying a local Mexican named Manuel with the stories of his problems. Coerced by Uncle Tito, he decides to go to Mississippi to make amends with Miranda. Border patrol agents repeatedly catch Eddie attempting to cross the U.S. border illegally with help from Tito, but he finally gets to Oxford, Mississippi.

Upon meeting Miranda's family, he learns that she has married her previous boyfriend. Despite promising to leave Miranda alone, Eddie sneaks in and awakens Miranda as her husband sleeps. Her husband wakes up when Martin bursts in and attacks Eddie with a baseball bat until Doc intervenes. Eddie agrees to leave if Miranda says she truly loves her new husband, which she does. Eddie leaves with Doc, without knowing that Miranda looks longingly from her balcony as he walks away.

Eighteen months later, Eddie is divorced from Lila (who got his sports store) and he moves permanently to Mexico to sell sporting goods on the beach. Some time later, Miranda arrives in Mexico and finds Eddie. She has left her husband, is single, and still in love with him. Eddie is thrilled. In a twist ending, Miranda is unaware that Eddie had remarried to a woman named Consuela, causing Eddie to go through the same predicament again.

In a post-credits scene, it is revealed that Lila had returned to Los Cabos and stayed at a hotel room with a donkey whom she has sexual relations with.

Cast

  • Ben Stiller as Edward "Eddie" Cantrow, a sports store owner who marries too soon and goes through turmoil.
  • Michelle Monaghan as Miranda, a woman in Mexico who Eddie believes is his true soulmate.
  • Malin Åkerman as Lila Cantrow, Eddie's wife who at first is everything Eddie wants, but later turns out to be a total nightmare due to her bad habits.
  • Jerry Stiller as Doc Cantrow, Eddie's father who often visits Las Vegas and gives Eddie rather vulgar tips on women.
  • Rob Corddry as Mac, Eddie's best friend who is in a struggling marriage himself.
  • Carlos Mencia as Uncle Tito, the owner of the hotel in Los Cabos that Eddie and Lila stay in on their honeymoon.
  • Scott Wilson as Boo, Miranda's uncle and Martin and Buzz's dad.
  • Danny McBride as Martin, Miranda's cousin who is suspicious of Eddie and treats him coldly.
  • Roy Jenkins as Buzz, Martin's brother who treats Eddie more fairly.
  • Ali Hillis as Jodi, Eddie's ex-girlfriend who gets married at the start of the film.
  • Amy Sloan as Deborah, Martin's wife.
  • Kayla Kleevage as Doc's Vegas Companion, a huge-chested woman who is in the scene with Doc during his phone conversation with Eddie.
  • Stephanie Courtney as Gayla, Buzz's wife.
  • Polly Holliday as Beryll, Boo's wife, Miranda's aunt, and Martin and Buzz's mom.
  • Eva Longoria as Consuela Cantrow, a Mexican woman who became Eddie's second wife at the end of the film sometime during the 18 month gap.
  • Lauren Bowles as Tammy, Mac's wife who ends up in a dysfunctional marriage with him.
  • Luis Accinelli as Manuel, an elderly Mexican who Eddie annoys after being stranded in Mexico.
  • Jerry Sherman as Anderson, Miranda's granddad.
  • Dean Norris as Jodi's father.

Promotion

During the film's preview at the 2007 San Diego Comic-Con, a sex scene from the film was cut due to backlash for the nudity in prior films at the convention such as 300 and Borat.[2]

Reception

Box office

The film grossed US$14,022,105 (equivalent to $19,789,824 in 2022) in 3,219 theaters in its opening weekend, putting it in second place at the box office in North America. The film eventually grossed a total of $127,766,650 (equivalent to $180,320,963 in 2022) worldwide, which includes $36,787,257 in North America and $90,979,393 in other territories.[3]

Critical response

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 29% based on 157 reviews, with an average rating of 4.56/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Despite some amiable performances, The Heartbreak Kid is neither as daring nor as funny as the Farrelly Brothers' earlier films".[4] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 46 out of 100, based on 30 reviews, which indicates "mixed or average reviews".[5] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C" on an A+ to F scale.[6]

Peter Travers (of Rolling Stone) declared the film the year's Worst Remake on his list of the Worst Movies of 2007.[7] Jonathan Rosenbaum (of The Chicago Reader) dismissed it as "brain-dead".[8]

References

  1. ^ "Box office: 'Game Plan' holds off 'Heartbreak Kid'". New York Daily News.
  2. ^ "Malaysia Sun". Stiller's S and M sex scene axed. Retrieved September 3, 2007.
  3. ^ "The Heartbreak Kid (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Amazon.com. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
  4. ^ "The Heartbreak Kid (2007)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved March 29, 2020.
  5. ^ "The Heartbreak Kid (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved November 27, 2007.
  6. ^ "Awful $14M Weekend is Heartbreak, Kid: The Rock's Game Plan Ends up #1 Again". 6 October 2007.
  7. ^ Travers, Peter, (December 19, 2007) "Peter Travers' Best and Worst Movies of 2007" Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  8. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan, (January 03, 2008) "Something to Talk About" The Chicago Reader. Retrieved March 9, 2020.

External links