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Eat Pray Love – Review by Romy Shiller

I think I deserve something beautiful.

— Elizabeth Gilbert (Eat Pray Love)

I really wasn’t going to review the awful film Eat Pray Love (dir. Ryan Murphy). I didn’t want to re-visit a big waste of time. Maybe I can spare one person a bad experience though. I know that I’m going against the grain – people love Julia Roberts, love the book it’s based on – so I apologize in advance, I thought the film sucked.

While trying to get pregnant, a happily married woman realizes her life needs to go in a different direction, and after a painful divorce, she takes off on a round-the-world journey. Based on the memoir by Elizabeth Gilbert. (IMDB) or blah, blah, blah.

My friend Jonathan Elliot’s blog asks if this film is New Age or Hindu. I said neither. Casting a big Hollywood star like Roberts reeks of the materialism rejected by each area. It’s very good to bring Hindu ideals to the masses but I see Mary-Louise Parker in the role actually. A HUGE Hollywood movie star is like ‘buy me ’or buy Hinduism. The slickness…

He says, “The book is a good introduction to Hinduism because it gives a feel for what day-to-day life might be like for a (Western) Hindu, a religion I find quite hard to fathom given it’s huge age, diversity and – to be honest – weirdness.” The film wasn’t even weird just boring.

A few people I know could not stand the film and were happy that my perspective seemed to validate their own. I have never encountered such a hush-up tone to a film. That itself makes me want to scream – loud.

A psychologist was interviewed about the film on the radio. She said that it’s hard to translate introspection and navel-gazing to the big screen. I disagree except for this film. I mean look at My Own Private Idaho (Van Sant). She also said that Gilbert (main character) always had a man in her life and that continues via teachers etc. Sure, her guru is female but she is absent – she is an absent-presence. The same song, only in Sanskrit.

The film yanked at my travel-bug. However, I wanted to jump off this bus. I also want to eat exquisite food. However, the important representation of food could have been more lush. I am reminded of the wonderful aesthetic in Marie Antoinette helmed by Sofia Coppola. Let them eat cake, indeed.

I was going to leave the theatre mid-way through the film. I absolutely did not care about Julia Roberts’ character. The character in the film was not written well at all. She was unsympathetic and flat. Javier Bardem was the only eye-candy for me that made this film bearable.
One review says, “So let’s break this down, shall we? Love stories are much more tangible when they have substance: fewer reaction shots, more substance. There was enough to work with here to make this a solid film, but ultimately Eat Pray Love falls victim to its own storyline, and ends up another silly love story rather than a credible piece of filmmaking.” (Smells Like Screen Spirit) Yup.

This film was poorly made: bad film-script, direction, editing, cinematography. Eat Pray Love was hollow – the worst this year. Blech.

Romy Shiller is a pop culture critic and holds a PhD in Drama from the University of Toronto. Her academic areas of concentration include film, gender performance, camp and critical thought. She lives in Montreal where she continues her writing. All books are available online.

website: www.romyshiller.com

If you wish to contact Romy Shiller, feel free to email her at romy@romyshiller.com.

  • http://spritzophrenia.wordpress.com Jonathan Elliot

    Thanks for quoting me Romy! :D

    My blog, for those interested is
    http://spritzophrenia.wordpress.com/2010/08/12/eat-pray-love/

    Jonathan from Spritzophrenia

    • http://www.liveforfilms.com liveforfilms

      Cool, I have updated the post with a link to your blog

      • http://spritzophrenia.wordpress.com Jonathan Elliot

        Oh thanks, that was fast! Good work :)

  • http://spritzophrenia.wordpress.com Jonathan Elliot

    This is one of my favourite reviews of yours, Romy, ironic that it slates the movie :) (And not just because you quote me.)

    Having only read the book I find the different perspective the film gave you interesting, particularly that it didn’t appear to be either New Age or Hindu, given those are such strong and detailed themes in the book. Perhaps the producers felt it would scare people off? I did hear the scenery was beautiful, but I think this will be a wait-for-DVD one for me.

  • kriz

    maybe i shouldn’t say this for fear of the underground glitterati but Ms. Roberts essentially forced her hand / face into the role. The author wanted someone, well someone more like a Naomi Watts was one name and Michelle Williams was another. You see to being with she is blond but no matter- Plan B was A-list and a movie that you have to swallow like an Epsom Salt colon flush if you know anything about the book behind the book… there- i said it. intuitive review

  • @meryl333

    Gotta put in a plug for “Children of Immortal Bliss” http://amzn.to/bq –. It explores the core tenets of Vedanta (one of the six schools of Hinduism) from a philosophical and practical standpoint. Since its concepts are at the heart of every religion’s mystical roots, you will recognize many of these ideas and enjoy reading a clear, easy to read presentation that is mminently accessible. Much better than trying to get it from a movie. Diisclaimer: my good friend Anna Hourihan did the editing. :)

    • http://spritzophrenia.wordpress.com Jonathan Elliot

      thanks Meryl, I will check that out (link didn’t work for me, but I will find it – wonders of the internet)

  • @meryl333

    Just saw a few typo errors. Thankfully, I did not do the editing. (grin).

  • renton PL

    Thanks for the objective review- all the corrupted paper reviewers are gonna praise that piece of crap to high heaven, probably. Still its sad that films like 500 days of summer or the Road or even Funny Ppl perform poorly at the cinemas whereas Transformers 2 and such break the box office

    • http://spritzophrenia.wordpress.com Jonathan Elliot

      I agree with Renton, The Road was an amazing movie. Surprised it did not do so well – although it was rather depressing, compared to the fluffy girl-friendly EPL :D

  • lordbronco

    *nods* to the Romy.

    Thank you much for the timely review–offers to throw cape upon a mud puddle before watching another blecch-fest.

    A few thoughts:

    I almost had to watch this movie as a means to alleviate homelessness.

    The Lady in question chose not to push the issue.

    We almost had to squat on a public beach-but I have a feeling that that would have been a better option.

    Things worked out, btw.

    I have not had to watch this movie yet owing to survival training skills.

    It was a “survival situation” situation as the professionals say…

    Close call, though…

  • DK

    Wait, Julia Roberts DID NOT force her hand or face to this movie. In fact, she was the LAST person on board. Brad Pitt and his producing partner Dede Gardner wanted to make the movie, then they asked Ryan Murphy to direct and the three of them decided that Julia Roberts would be the best person for the role and she didn’t even accept it right away.

    The movie isn’t a good one, but lets not spread false information. Julia did not force anything, Brad Pitt and Ryan Murphy both had already planned to make the film and said they could only see Julia in the role and that is why they offered it to her and would not let up until she said yes. Because if she would have said no, the film would not have been made.

    Julia Roberts and Ryan Murphy have talked about this numerous times. Also, Elizabeth Gilbert had some say-so in the screenplay. She did not write it but Ryan Murphy clearly stated that he talked to Liz Gilbert several times about details and she gave him a ton of information as he (and Jennifer Salt) was writing the screenplay.

    The main problem with the movie is the screenplay and the direction. I actually found the acting to be quite good, just not good enough to rise above the crappy material. However the movie is expected to make 80-90 million at the box office (it is currently at 70 million), and with anyone other than Julia Roberts in the role, I doubt it would have made over 40 million.

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