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Review by Dustin Putman
2 stars out of 4
"The Prince & Me" makes no bones about the fact that it is a formulaic
romantic fantasy, but it is still deceptive. For the first 90 minutes
of its running time, the characters and situations were more or less
based in reality, with the subj ect of a farm girl swept off her feet
by a royal prince as plausibly handled as one could possibly expect.
And then comes a climax that, in a key sequence set before a crowd
of Denmark onlookers, strains the boundaries of one's suspension of
disbelief. Still, this moment was hardly calamitous to the entire
product. Unfortunately, it is followed by an enraging final scene
that not only has a clumsy, tacked-on feel, as if test screening audiences
got ahold of it in their narrow pursuit of a neat-and-tidy conclusion,
but also goes against everything our heroine was set up to believe
in. In this fleeting last second, "The Prince & Me" was converted
from an amiable enough light entertainment into an unforgivably condescending
waste of time.
Paige Morgan (Julia Stiles) is a studious pre-med student entering
her final undergraduate year at a Wisconsin university. As she sees
all of her old high school friends finally getting engaged and married,
Paige has a difficult time understandi ng their intentions. She has
never really been in love, and wants nothing more than to continue
her schooling career at Johns Hopkins. When Paige meets Eddie (Luke
Mably), a dashing new student who becomes her chemistry lab partner,
they at first get off on the wrong foot. With assistant Soren (Eddie
Miller) almost always in tow, she sees Eddie as little more than a
spoiled rich kid. And then he surprised Paige with his charm and understanding,
proving there is more to him than just money and smooth moves, and
a romance gradually forms between the two. What Paige doesn't yet
know is that Eddie's full name is Edvard Valdemaar Dangaard, and he
is the distinguished Prince of Denmark.
Directed by Martha Coolidge (1983's "Valley Girl"), "The Prince &
Me" takes a detour in the second half, bringing to the forefront Paige's
compelling dilemma. Tracking down Eddie in Denmark after he returns
home to be with his ailing father, Paige finds herself suddenly engaged
and faced with becomin g a princess. What she soon comes to understand,
however, is that she is simply not cut out for being royalty, especially
at the expense of a future medical career that she is so passionate
about. For a while, the film seems to be headed down a more honest
and mature path than the average frothy romance, with Paige unwilling
to give up her hard-earned dreams for a fairy tale life of luxury.
Due either to the spineless screenplay by Jack Amiel, Michael Begler,
and Katherine Fulgate, or a last-minute reshoot, this appreciably
realistic trajectory is not to be. The way in which Paige's quandary
and relationship to Eddie are wrapped up feels abrupt and cheap, foregoing
a number of more truthful (and still upbeat) alternative endings for
one that gives Paige the short end of the stick. For a young woman
whom the viewer has grown to like and admire, she is not treated with
the respect she deserves.
Perhaps the ending of "The Prince & Me" is so disappointing because
Jul ia Stiles (2003's "Mona Lisa Smile") injects Paige, as she can
be counted on to do with all her characters, with real intelligence
and resiliency. Stiles naturally has these character traits, almost
no matter what the part, and here she ultimately comes off as far
smarter than the stock screenplay she is stuck within. What Paige
is asked to go along with in that sloppy final scene simply isn't
believable to how she would really react in the situation, and so
the whole film collapses around her. Julia Stiles is one of the very
best actresses of her generation, and is good enough to almost make
the film (minus the last minute or two) worth seeing. Not quite, but
she gives it her best shot.
As love interest Eddie, Luke Mably (2003's "28 Days Later") joins
the ranks of Matthew Goode in 2004's worse "Chasing Liberty" and Josh
Duhamel in 2004's better "Win a Date with Tad Hamilton!" as no-name
love interests asked to basically be bland and withhold their bigger
female co-stars. To his credit, Mably is plausible as a prince and
does share adequate chemistry with Stiles, which is more than could
be said between Goode and Mandy Moore in "Chasing Liberty."
In bringing "The Prince & Me" to the screen, director Martha Coolidge
and sharing distributors Paramount and Lion's Gate have sold themselves,
and audiences, short. A featherweight romance for teenage audiences
doesn't have to invent the wheel, but it does need to treat its heroine
with the same respect put into setting up the character in the first
place. "The Prince & Me" fails to do this, mist akenly believing that
all viewers will leave happy only if they see their lead female character
ride away happily into the sunset with her prince. If that was the
way the filmmakers wanted to go, then they shouldn't have set the
story in a place resembling the real world. The ending, plain and
simple, cheapens all that has come before.
Copyright © 2004 Dustin Putman
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