Much of the dialogue in Nicholas Stoller’s The Five Year Engagement (2012) is strictly for adolescents. It’s childishly raunchy. Also, it’s a movie other people have found funnier than I have.
And yet . . . it’s not bad.
Tom (Jason Segel), a chef, and Violet (Emily Blunt), a psychology grad student, are forced into a five-year engagement–as they incur various problems–after Tom proposes marriage. Besides some agreeable details in the script (by Stoller and Segel), what interests us is that this is one romantic comedy that takes romantic love seriously. Such love truly exists between Tom and Violet, and the chemistry between Segel and Blunt is palpably good. Blunt, by the way, is excellent; Segel passable.
The writing doesn’t always hold up, as when Tom all but loses it over Violet’s admission that a psych professor forced a kiss on her one night. But Engagement, smutty as it is, has its charms. And it has quite a cast–hooray for Alison Brie, but let’s see more David Paymer, please.
An exemplary modern romantic comedy, personal and symbolic, goofy and substantial, tightly imagined yet loosely strung, wise in bewilderment.
I love romantic comedy and thanks for sharing this one. I will definitely watch this. Your review is awesome.
Many thanks.
Great review. Thanks for making this review. It will help movie goers to determine if the movie is good to watch.
This is a good movie as romantic comedies go. I think Emily Blunt is under rated and deserves better.
I love romantic comedy and thanks for sharing this one. Thanks for making this review.
I appreciate your response.
I enjoy watching this movie. It is really fun and the actors really give their best on the movie.
There is something on this movie that I really like to watch. Thanks for the review.
Thanks for the movie info and for the movie review of this five years engagement.