Watching the tangled love triangle in Kissing a Fool, you may experience a vague
sense of déjà vu. There's an element of the classic Hollywood romantic
comedy here, albeit a little rough around the edges, that evokes a timeless quality
grounded in the belief that true love always prevails. That said, Kissing a Fool
is no The Philadelphia Story, but it's frequently engaging, a moviegoing diversion
seemingly made for this throwaway time of year. The central conceit in James Frey
and Doug Ellin's script involves another kind of indecent proposal: Self-centered
but insecure sportscaster Max asks his best friend, the super-sensitive writer Jay,
to make a pass at his fiancée Sam, so that Max will know whether his future
wife will be faithful to him in marriage. Aside from the Freudian angle -- before
meeting Sam, Max was a notorious womanizer -- there's something very twisted going
on here from a moral perspective. But as it turns out, Kissing a Fool tells the age-old
story of crisscrossed love finally righting itself in the last reel in a contemporary
way that's this side of superficial, down to its last f-word. Not without its problems,
however, the film often has trouble bridging plot point to plot point (either a script
or editing shortcoming), and some of the characters' critical motivations seem out
of left field. (Max's sudden lack of confidence as to whether he can sexually satisfy
Sam in their nuptial bed stems from the fact that she went to an all-girls Catholic
school. Obviously, the guy has listened to one too many bad Billy Joel songs.) Schwimmer,
who is also the film's executive producer, has the showy role of Max, no doubt attempting
to prove a comedic ability outside the rather limited range offered by the schmuck
character he plays weekly on television's Friends. He's all right in the part, although
the character's obnoxiousness escalates to such a degree as the film progresses that
you're left to wonder why anyone would be his best friend, fiancée, mother,
or even household pet. (The movie's martyrized transformation of Max in the end simply
isn't believable.) The women in Kissing a Fool aren't fleshed out very well either
-- the movie is really cruel to Angel, who plays Jay's horrible ex-girlfriend -- although
Avital is winning, even if a little passive, as the woman caught in the middle. The
real star turn comes in Lee's performance as Jay. Although his overemphatic delivery
sometimes demands a little more subtlety, Lee projects something for the first time
in this movie: a warm vulnerability, coupled with a guileless sexiness. When his
boyish appeal breaks through in Kissing a Fool, there's no question who's going to
get the girl.
2.5 stars Steve Davis
--Steve Davis
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