The poster of 'Life As We Know It'. 
Reviews

Life As We Know It

Nothing unexpected or funny,

From our online archive

‘Life As We Know It' (English, Rom-com, 2011)

Director: Greg Berlanti

Cast: Katherine Heigl, Josh Duhamel, Josh Lucas

If you consider the title of this Rom-com, you'd imagine it to be a slice of life. Sadly, despite a few funny moments, it's far from it.

Holly (Katherine Heigl) and Eric (Josh Duhamel), the best friends of Peter (Hayes MacArthur) and Allison (Christina Hendrick), can't stand each other. Trouble begins when Peter and Allison die in an accident and leave their infant child Sophie in their joint custody and care.

Not wanting to give the child of their best friends away to social welfare, they try burying their differences to raise the infant. But the double whammy of their absolute incompatibility with each other and the inexperience of raising a child would prove to be the greatest challenge of their life. Somewhere in between, love will smile upon them.

The film begins shakily, and far from raising a laugh, actually seems disjointed. However, once it gets going, it becomes a comfortable ride, yet not a ride that is unexpected anywhere or funny.

The chemistry between Heigl and Duhamel is decent, but it is the script that lets them down. The film fails in its attempts to merge two sub-genres - of opposites repel then attract and bringing up a baby. There already have been enough movies on both that there's hardly anything original left to do here.

Yet, the film does have its few funny moments, mostly raised by the antics of the baby Sophie, played delightfully by triplets, Alexis, Brynn and Brooke Clagett.

Katherine Heigl, who has emerged as the latest Rom-com Girl after a string of romantic films like ‘The Ugly Truth’, ‘27 Dresses’ and ‘Knocked Up’, plays her usual do-gooder, the Betty type girl from Archies comics.

The other problem with the film is that it is at least half an hour too long for the attention span of an average Indian viewer. In the end though, more than the length, it is the banality of gags that have all been used before in other films that truly does the film in.

Trump meeting with aides to make 'final determination' on moving forward with Iran deal

US envoy says interim trade deal with India in final stages, likely soon

AAP sweeps Punjab civic polls; wins big across municipal corporations, councils

Centre asks state-run fuel retailers to build 30-day LPG reserves amid West Asia supply concerns

NEET-UG to shift to computer-based format from next year, NTA tells SC

SCROLL FOR NEXT