Most Popular
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Barack Obama and Me
It was the year 2000 and I was a young hungry reporter in Chicago covering a young hungry state legislator
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita
For days after the storm, inmates in Beaumont lived without A/C, electricity or hot meals. Press releases kept saying everything inside was fine. Guards and prisoners agree — that was nothing but B.S.
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Little Bitty Burger Barn
"It's okay to be little bitty in the big city" is an apt slogan for this new burger joint, where sliders rule
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Live-Action Role-Players Get Boffed in Amtgard
Amid flailing swords and flying shields, these modern-day knights fight on
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Barack Obama and Me (257)
It was the year 2000 and I was a young hungry reporter in Chicago covering a young hungry state legislator
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita (24)
For days after the storm, inmates in Beaumont lived without A/C, electricity or hot meals. Press releases kept saying everything inside was fine. Guards and prisoners agree — that was nothing but B.S.
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Are You Hot Enough for Citizen Lounge? (7)
All This Useless Beauty
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What's the Problem Houston? (6)
The city's skuzzy alt-rock scene thinks it is dying
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Live-Action Role-Players Get Boffed in Amtgard (5)
Amid flailing swords and flying shields, these modern-day knights fight on
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Sister Act: The Other Boleyn Girl
Sibling rivalry in all its royal glory
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Fast and Loose: The Bank Job
True or false? This heist flick is too much fun to fact-check
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The Funny Games People Play
Michael Haneke and his brutal home invaders return to implicate you, again
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Charlie Bartlett Could Use a Dose of Mean
Kids These Days
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Personal Foul: Semi-Pro
Will Ferrell's umpteenth sports comedy is only half bad. His half.
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You Look Like a Freak When You Play With Your Wii
01:07AM 03/20/08 -
Meet Paul Ford, the 763 mp3 Guy: He Covered the Waterfront like No Other, from Over 1,000 miles Away
06:06AM 03/20/08 -
Spring Training: Itching for Pitching
03:15PM 03/19/08 -
$13 at Zake Sushi Lounge
11:41AM 03/18/08
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- American Gangster
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Recent Articles By Robert Wilonsky
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Stardust
Matthew Vaughn hacks at Neil Gaiman's fantasy wonderland
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Elvis Is Everywhere
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Fuzz Busters
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No Reservations
No Reservations is sweet and savory fare. Without the foam
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Chow Time Again
National Features
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Village Voice
A Long Way Wrong?
Another celebrated memoir threatens to blow into a million little pieces.
By Graham Rayman -
LA Weekly
Hoop Dawg
Billionaire Donald T. Sterling owns the L.A. Clippers and loves the ladies. And those are just two of his problems.
By Patrick Range McDonald -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
The Player Priests
They were holy men--and they sure knew how to party.
By Amy Guthrie -
Westword
The Good Soldier
When the Army tried to take down Andrew Pogany, they messed with the wrong coward.
By Joel Warner
Straight to Helen
Hudson's a bad mother, and sister, in this pat parenthood tale
By Robert Wilonsky
Published: May 27, 2004Sitting through Raising Helen is an exercise in frustration, because somewhere inside this big heap of Hollywood nothing is a something (someone, actually) worth saving and savoring. Her name is Joan Cusack, always a supporting player but never a star, no matter her grace and warmth and charm even in the tiniest of parts; she's like a session musician who makes every record she's on sound a little better, indispensable but also inexplicably anonymous. The title of her moribund ABC sitcom said it all: What About Joan.
Here, trapped inside a glib and predictable story about how it takes a child to nurture an adult, Cusack plays a woman who essentially has been a mother since she was a little girl, when her own mom died and left her to raise an older sister who left home and a younger one who never stayed at home. Now that she's older, Cusack's Jenny is still the middle child -- forgotten and left to play by herself while everyone fawns over the pretty sister, played by Kate Hudson, one of those prefab movie stars who the more we see of her, the less we care for her. Hudson, in films such as How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days and About Adam and Alex and Emma, more and more comes off like a medium talent; she all but disappears in the scenes she shares with Cusack.
There's not an original thought or sincere bone in Raising Helen's body -- or, more accurately, Hudson's body, which is spread across the movie's poster like some soft-core come-on or an advertisement for the Ugg boots she's wearing. You've seen this movie before, when it was called Jersey Girl or Baby Boom, in which a go-go exec's life is turned catawampus by the unexpected arrival of a child, either their own or someone else's, apparently because no one in these movies has ever heard of a nanny.
Hudson's Helen is the prototypical protagonist of these stories: a hottie-to-trot single girl living the Manhattan high life as a modeling agency rep (she works for Helen Mirren, and rarely has someone so wonderful been so wasted). Her life is thrown into chaos when her sister Lindsay (Felicity Huffman, late of Sports Night) and brother-in-law die in a car crash during the movie's first ten minutes. Helen's older sister Jenny expects to get the kids; she's already a mother herself, after all. But Lindsay has left the three kids with Helen, who's no more qualified than a fungus to raise children.
Nonetheless, she takes on the chore, first by moving the children out of the suburbs and into the outer boroughs of New York, then by enrolling them in an Episcopalian private school run by Pastor Dan (another mayo-on-white-bread role for John Corbett), then by taking a job in a used-car lot run by Hector Elizondo. Helen has no idea how to raise children since she's pretty much one herself, by her own admission. She was once the oldest child's confidante -- they giggled over fake ID cards and shared girlie secrets -- but now that Helen has to play Mommy, she's lost; she can't even yell at the child when she has a dozen friends over for a late-night makeout throwdown. How ever will they work it out?
By doing what all lazy movies do: staging fights and emotional breakdowns that end with phony hugs, trying to make us cry and then tickling us into a stupid grin. One character says the kids are haunted by the death of the parents and that Henry especially has become sullen and distant and has taken to drawing skulls in his notepad. But we never see that Henry; we're shown only a happy, goofy kid who seems dropped in from another story line no one else in the film's actually talking about.
But nothing makes any sense in a movie that appears to have been edited using kiddie scissors and masking tape. Garry Marshall's movies (Pretty Woman, Runaway Bride, The Princess Diaries) have always been phony fairy tales, and also clumsy ones, but this one feels especially dunderheaded. It's shallow and obvious, so totally dishonest you keep reaching back in your seat to make sure it didn't lift your wallet.
Worse, it strands its only intriguing character -- Cusack's Jenny -- on the sideline and has no idea what to do with her; she's villain and caricature, punch line and punching bag. Jenny is the most sympathetic character in the film -- a boulder among pebbles, a woman whose stability is perceived by others as insanity. Cusack is the very definition of a supporting player, but she's given the unseemly task of propping up people unworthy of her attention or affection. In the movie's only stirring scene, Jenny explains to Helen that she's the way she is -- demanding, humorless, perhaps even overbearing -- because she was never allowed her own childhood. Helen responds by yelling at Jenny and storming out, which makes her not just a bad mother, but also a lousy sister and an awful heroine for a story about what it means, and what it takes, to grow up.










