There's a Capra-esque joy in this small and unpretentious movie.
New in Town (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:135
Fresh:24
Rotten:111
Average Rating:3.7/10
Consensus: Cliched and short on charm, New In Town is a pat genre exercise that fails to bring the necessary heat to its Minnesota setting.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for language and some suggestive material.
Runtime: 1 hr 36 mins
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:Jan 30, 2009 Wide
Box Office: $16,699,684
Synopsis: Renee Zellweger stars opposite Harry Connick Jr. in this snow-packed romantic comedy. NEW IN TOWN begins in Miami, home to Lucy Hill (Zellweger), a single, high-powered executive on the fast track... Renee Zellweger stars opposite Harry Connick Jr. in this snow-packed romantic comedy. NEW IN TOWN begins in Miami, home to Lucy Hill (Zellweger), a single, high-powered executive on the fast track to being a CEO. With her spiked heels, plush bachelorette pad, and fierce collection of power suits, Lucy is unprepared when her boss sends her to snowy Minnesota to work on-site at one of the company's factories. Reluctantly leaving her sunny home, Lucy lands in New Ulm, a small town distinguished by a thick Midwestern accent, a strong work ethic, and an appropriately skeptical attitude toward big-city newcomers like Lucy, who finds herself in a brutal battle against several factory workers, a nosy assistant (Siobhan Fallon), and a stubborn union rep (Connick) who, as fate would have it, just happens to be a love interest as well. Zellweger appears a bit wooden at the start of the film but eases into her role as the film progresses. As her character grows more comfortable in her own skin and develops some empathy towards her new neighbors, we see Zellweger's familiar charm emerge. Much of the film's humor comes at the expense of Minnesotans, but the cast delivers the jokes in good fun. Director Jonas Elmer captures some chemistry between his two leads, though the film doesn't rely too heavily on this romance. Instead, it explores the differences in small- versus big-town life, exposing the unique, homey appeal of the former. By focusing on the people working behind the scenes, NEW IN TOWN celebrates a way of American life that is rarely the focus of Hollywood romantic comedies. [More]
Starring: Renée Zellweger, Harry Connick, Siobhan Fallon Hogan, J.K. Simmons
Starring: Renée Zellweger, Harry Connick, Siobhan Fallon Hogan, J.K. Simmons, Frances Conroy, Mike O'Brien, Rashida Jones
Director: Jonas Elmer
Director: Jonas Elmer
Screenwriter: Kenneth Rance, C. Jay Cox
Producer: Paul Brooks, Peter Safran, Darryl Taja, Tracey E. Edmonds
Composer: John Swihart
Studio: Lions Gate Films
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Release:
May 26, 2009
DVD Features:
- Region [unknown]
- NTSC
- Keep Case
- Full Frame
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 2.0, Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Subtitles - English, Spanish
Additional Release Material:
- Audio Commentary: Cast & Crew
- Deleted Scenes: Deleted Scenes
Featurette:
- 1. Making NEW IN TOWN in Winnipeg, Canada
- 2. The Folk Art of Scrapbooking
- 3. Pudding’s Delicious Role in NEW IN TOWN
Reviews for New in Town
Zellweger and Connick are likable in the lead roles, and J.K. Simmons is a low-key gas as a plant supervisor.
There should be a special Oscar for good actors who still give their all when they're in bad movies.
[A] drearily cheerful little picture that isn't nearly as funny or as heartwarming -- or even as topical, given the economic climate -- as it thinks it is.
Whereas Bridget stands as the best Hollywood romantic comedy of the past decade, New in Town hovers somewhere near the middle of the subpar pack.
With the recession getting worse by the day, it's asking an awful lot for audiences to laugh at a romantic comedy centering on corporate layoffs.
The film squeezes every ounce of sweet-tempered comic potential from brutal windchill, Lutheran reticence and white-bread cuisine.
The timing couldn't have been better for a romantic comedy with a love-among-the-financial-ruins theme to come along. But if you're looking for a welcome mat for New in Town, you won't find it here.
You can see every minute of New In Town coming at you like a train on a Prairie horizon.
Broad accents, broader slapstick and a willful shrinking from anything remotely original. ... Also much condescension, toward both the characters and the audience.
Poor Renée. Her character may find a cozy hearth, but she's definitely left way out in the cold.
Yes, this movie offers dumb hope in wretched times, but for many, dumb hope is preferable to no hope at all.
It's meant to be a winsome romantic comedy, which might have been able to reach its destiny if it didn't have to chop its way through a thicket of stereotypes and bad jokes.
As a comic fable for hard times, New in Town is irredeemably moronic.
A romantic comedy for our fiscal moment, when so many people are facing job insecurity and loss. This context gives a rather lighthearted romance some actual gravitas.
In one scene, the townsfolk, candles in hand, gather around an outdoor Christmas tree to sing about Jesus; at the end of the performance, I kind of expected them to lead Zellweger, the outsider, off to a large wicker man.
New in Town is The Pajama Game without the songs, the laughs or the bare-knuckled realism.
Latest News for New in Town
May 25, 2009:
RT on DVD: New In Town vs. Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus!
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February 08, 2009:
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January 29, 2009:
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January 29, 2009:
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