Matthew Broderick, Meg Ryan, Kelly Preston, Tcheky Karyo,
Maureen Stapleton. (R, 101 min.)
When lovesick small-town astronomer Sam (Broderick) loses his one true love Linda
(Preston) to the thrall of the big city, he packs up his things and goes in search
of her, sure in his heart that she'll be back in his loving arms soon. His plans
are soon stymied when he discovers that Linda has moved in with Anton (Karyo of Luc
Besson's La Femme Nikita), a French émigré and owner of a swank Greenwich
Village bistro. Unthwarted by this unexpected turn of events, Sam takes up residence
in the abandoned tenement across the street from Anton's toney brownstone, where
he embarks on a rigorous and wholly scientific study of the blissfully unaware young
lovers, still certain that his lady love will yet return to him. Into this odd tableaux
comes Maggie (Ryan), Anton's ex-girlfriend, the proverbial woman scorned. While heartsick
Sam is only interested in returning his romance to the way it was before, Maggie
(a bleached-blonde vision of East Village bohemia) would prefer that the callous
Anton be hanged, drawn, and quartered. Uniting under initially separate flags, Sam
and Maggie embark on a systematic dismantling of their ex-lover's newfound love,
planting grandly contrived evidence of illicit affairs on Anton's person and increasing
their espionage capabilities times 10. Director Dunne (who some may remember as Jack
the Dead Best Friend in An American Werewolf in London, or as the harried businessman
in Scorsese's After Hours) has a sly wit here, and Addicted to Love is more than
the simple romantic comedy its uninspired title suggests. It certainly falls easily
enough within the parameters of the genre, but Dunne wisely and quite ably avoids
the many pitfalls and clichés (or a good number of them, anyway) that appear
so ingrained in the storyline. For one thing, Addicted to Love starts off on a wholly
unpromising note for young Sam. His nascent adventures in the spy trade catch him
offguard initially: With Anton, Linda is a ferocious, passionately vocal lover, leaving
Sam to ponder "but she was always so quiet with me." Ryan's feisty, bitter Maggie
(our first contact with her is as she zooms around the area on a large black motorcycle,
clad head to toe in a tight, black leather racer's suit, and if that doesn't indicate
feisty and bitter, then I don't know what does) is the perfect foil for Sam's broken
heart; all she cares about is revenge, and when the two finally agree to work together,
Addicted to Love soars to bittersweet comedic heights. Dunne's eye is sharp: There's
a scene early in the film in which Sam constructs a camera obscura in the shadows
of his tenement warren. Bathed in dull, grainy light stolen from Anton's apartment
across the way, Sam whitewashes a wall and brings an image of Linda into view. It's
a wonderfully inventive, surreal, and wholly original image, and Dunne's film has
many such revelatory moments. The final reel's temporary lapse into maudlin sentimentality
is perhaps unavoidable in light of all the terrific bits that have preceded it, but
still, this is one of the most inventive romantic comedies to come around in some
while.
Capsule Reviews
Addicted to Love 
Other Films by Griffin Dunne
Practical Magic 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Practical Magic 
Can't Hardly Wait 
Chasing Amy 
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