Peter Bradshaw 

She’s Funny That Way review – dated farce not really funny that way

Owen Wilson, Jennifer Aniston and a smattering of high-profile cameos can’t rescue this strained offering crammed full of wacky coincidences
  
  

Jennifer Aniston and Rhys Ifans
Jennifer Aniston and Rhys Ifans get caught up in a big tangle of twists Photograph: PR

One of the great American directors, Peter Bogdanovich, has returned with his first feature for many years. Sadly, it’s a strained and dated screwball farce, crammed with wacky coincidences and self-conscious cameos but not many funny lines, notionally set in present-day New York, but looking as if it could be happening decades before that.

In fact, She’s Funny That Way feels like one of Woody Allen’s recent luxury-tourist European capers, and bathed in the orangey-yellow light that suffuses a certain kind of old-fashioned hotel lobby. Imogen Poots plays Izzy, a wannabe Broadway star making a living as an escort — one of her most gallant and infatuated clients is Arnold (Owen Wilson), who happens to be the theatre producer for whom she is auditioning.

The film team review She’s Funny That Way

There is a great big tangle of twists, involving another of Izzy’s clients, a judge (Austin Pendleton), who sees the same therapist as her, the imperious Jane (Jennifer Aniston), whose boyfriend (Will Forte) is a dramatist and has actually written the very play that Izzy’s trying out for. This is a movie with its finger some way from the pulse of modern life: an oddity which captures neither the classic feel of the Ernst Lubitsch Golden Age nor the reality of present day Manhattan. There are one or two laughs.

 

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