P.S, I Love You Review
by Drew Turney
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Sometimes the simplest stories are the most poignant, as this plain spoken and affecting movie proves.
Hilary
Swank is Holly, an uptight New Yorker whom we first meet walking home
in a rage, several steps ahead of her baffled husband Gerry (300
star Gerard Butler). A fight has either been brewing or is about to,
and it’s left to Gerry to follow her home and try and extract
whatever’s wrong (he does) without having Holly throw something at him
in the process (she does).
The fight is about an off the cuff
remark to Holly’s family about the couple’s plans for children, and
it’s just one bugbear about their relationship that ties Holly in knots
and straight away makes the couple feel so real to us, much more than
if we’d met them rowing on a lake gazing into each other’s eyes.
The
fact is that Holly and Gerry are crazy about each other, so it’s with
skilfully managed shock that we’re then transported to a later time to
witness Gerry’s funeral after his death from cancer.
As Holly
reels and withdraws from work, friends and her family in episodes that
are by turns funny, touching and heartbreaking, something strange
happens. Gerry sends her a letter telling her to go and buy a new
dress, get dolled up and paint the town red with her girlfriends.
Soon
after, another one arrives telling her to do something similarly
outrageous and enlivening, then another. The instructions range from
the frivolous to the grandiose, including a paid-for holiday to his
native Ireland to spend time with his parents, friends and heritage.
Each one was carefully planned by Gerry during his last months alive to
be delivered to her on a particular date, and the end of every letter
is signed ‘PS, I Love You’.
That the letters are designed to
bring Holly back to life is no surprise, but it’s the sincerity,
sensitivity, humour and honesty writer/director Richard LaGravenese
uses to depict her re-awakening that is. PS I Love You
could easily have been a stupid 90-minute sitcom or a dour misery, but
it’s in the sweet spot where life can be either and both all at once.
Despite
her talents, Swank is fairly generic as Holly, but the supporting cast
is so stellar you hardly notice. Her best friends are played by Gina
Gershon and Lisa Kudrow in another priceless performance, and her
mother with gentle, wise humility by Kathy Bates.
It won’t be for everyone, but everyone who sees it will get something out of it. Like 2005’s In Her Shoes, it’s a chick flick that almost perfectly encapsulates so many things about life and all its idiosyncracies.
3 out
of 5 P.S, I Love You Australian release: 26th December, 2007 Cast: Hilary Swank, Gerard Butler, Lisa Kudrow, Gina Gershon, Harry Connick, Jr Director: Richard LaGravenese
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