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Down with Love

Down with Love is a 2003 American romantic comedy film directed by Peyton Reed. It stars Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor and is a pastiche of the early-1960s American "no-sex sex comedies",[4] such as Pillow Talk and Lover Come Back (both starring Rock Hudson, Doris Day, and Tony Randall) and the "myriad spawn"[5] of derivative films that followed; Time film critic Richard Corliss wrote that Down with Love "is so clogged with specific references to a half-dozen Rock-and-Doris-type comedies that it serves as definitive distillation of the genre."[4] Randall himself plays a small role in Down with Love, "bestowing his sly, patriarchal blessing"[6] on the film, which also stars David Hyde Pierce (in the neurotic best friend role often played by Randall or Gig Young), Sarah Paulson, Rachel Dratch, Jeri Ryan, and Jack Plotnick, who spoofs the kind of role Chet Stratton played in Lover Come Back.

Down with Love
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeyton Reed
Screenplay by
  • Eve Ahlert
  • Dennis Drake
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJeff Cronenweth
Edited byLarry Bock
Music byMarc Shaiman
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • May 9, 2003 (2003-05-09) (New York City)
  • May 16, 2003 (2003-05-16) (United States)
  • December 25, 2003 (2003-12-25) (Germany)
Running time
102 minutes
Countries
  • United States
  • Turkey
  • Poland
  • Germany[1]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$35 million[2]
Box office$39.5 million[3]

Typical of the genre, the film tells the story of a woman who advocates female independence in combat with a lothario; the plot reflects the attitudes and behaviour of the early pre-sexual revolution 1960s but has an anachronistic conclusion driven by more modern, post-feminist ideas and attitudes.

Plot

In 1962, aspiring author Barbara Novak arrives in New York to submit her book, Down with Love to Banner House publishing. It is about freeing women from love, enjoying sex without commitment, and replacing the need for a man with things such as chocolate. Barbara believes her rules will help boost women in the workplace and the world in general.

When Banner House's male executives reject the book, Vikki Hiller, Barbara's editor, suggests Barbara meet with Catcher Block—a successful writer for Know magazine and a notorious ladies' man—to help promote the book. However, Catcher repeatedly avoids meeting Barbara until, fed up, she insults him. Catcher's boss and best friend, Peter MacMannus, and Vikki develop a mutual attraction, but neither is brave enough to express their feelings. Peter feels overshadowed by Catcher's strong personality, and Vikki wants to see strength in her lover, even assuming Peter must be gay.

Barbara and Vikki persuade Judy Garland to sing "Down with Love" on The Ed Sullivan Show to promote the book. Sales skyrocket, as women around the world rebel against their men; Catcher now wants to meet Barbara but she rejects him. The breaking point comes as Barbara appears on a national TV show and discusses a chapter from her book—"The Worst Kind of Man"—and cites Catcher Block as the perfect example, causing the women he dates to reject him.

Catcher schemes to prove Barbara really wants love and marriage like every other woman. He poses as Major Zip Martin, a polite and attentive astronaut. Barbara is immediately infatuated with a man who seems unaware of her celebrity, in contrast to the men who now avoid her since her book was published. As "Zip" takes her to fashionable New York locations, he maintains sexual tension by feigning naivete and a desire to remain chaste until he is "ready" for a physical relationship. His plan becomes complicated after he starts falling for her.

When Barbara encounters Catcher/Zip at a party, which nearly exposes his true identity, he decides to take things to the next level. He tells her Catcher Block wants to interview him for an exposé on the NASA space program and asks her to be there. At his apartment, he sets everything up to record her saying she loves him. Just as they are about to have sex, one of his lovers, Gwendolyn, walks in. Not knowing who Barbara is, she exposes Catcher's identity, forcing him to confess to Barbara.

Barbara then reveals she is actually Nancy Brown, one of Catcher's many former secretaries, who'd fallen love with him whilst working at Know. She had turned down a date with him, refusing to be another fling. She wanted to be different from the other women he knew, and make him fall in love with her. Catcher proclaims he wants to marry her, but Gwendolyn, having overheard Barbara Novak's name, thanks her for what she has done for womankind.

Barbara realizes she does not want love or Catcher, as she has become a real "down with love" girl. Vikki and Peter's relationship also changes when she insults him for helping Catcher. Peter says he is indeed like any other man, and takes Vikki to Catcher's apartment to have passionate sex with her.

Days later, Catcher is completely depressed and has failed to win back Barbara. Even his exposé, which he wrote on how falling in love with her made him a better man, is ruined now that Barbara has told her story in her own magazine, Now. Catcher goes to Now on the pretense of a job interview. He tells Barbara how much she has changed him and wishes there could be a middle ground for them, somewhere between her confident blonde persona and her original brunette self. After he leaves her office, she surprises him on the elevator, showing him a bright red hair style. She has found the middle ground and wants to be with him. They elope to Las Vegas, inspiring Vikki and Peter to also get married.

The end credits show Barbara and Catcher's marriage has resulted in a new book aimed at ending the battle of the sexes. The pair sing "Here's to Love".

Cast

Style

The sets, costumes, cinematography, editing, score, opening credits, and visual effects (including split-screen shots during phone calls heavily laced with double entendres between the two leads), are carefully designed to echo the style of 1960s comedies. The New York City skyline of 1962 was digitally recreated for backdrops. A greenscreen technique was used to simulate unconvincing 1960s rear projection using restored street footage from the late 1950s and early 1960s. The film begins with the 1960s logos for 20th Century Fox and for CinemaScope, a wide-screen process introduced in the 1950s, developed and owned by 20th Century Fox, with the 1998 version of the fanfare, composed by Alfred Newman. The Regency Enterprises logo is in pink, and contains a saxophone jazz rendition of its theme.

Reception

Box office

Down with Love was chosen as "the perfect film" to open the second Tribeca Film Festival where it made its premiere.[7] The film opened first in New York, and was released country wide a week later May 16, 2003. The film was released as counter programming against The Matrix Reloaded.[2] The film performed worse than expected,[original research?] earning $40 million at the international box office.[3]

Critical response

At the time of its release, Down With Love received extremely varying reviews. Chicago Sun-Times critic Roger Ebert spoke of the film fairly positively, saying parts were "fun" and describing Zellweger's speech at the end as "a torrent of words [pouring] out from her character's innermost soul".[8] A. O. Scott in The New York Times praised director "Reed's buoyant homage," Zellweger's Doris Day-like ability to "swivel engagingly between goofiness and sex appeal", McGregor's Sinatra-like "wiry, wolfish energy" and screenwriters Ahlert's and Drake's "canny cocktail of period vernacular and deliberately labored double entendres", finding the movie "intelligent and amusing" with "a glorious, hectic artificiality". But he questioned "the point of the exercise" compared to Todd Haynes' Far from Heaven, which "plunged into the subtext of those old movies", whereas Down with Love, being an "updating and a critique", "snips that subtext away", making it "less sophisticated than what it imitates".[6]

Conversely, The San Francisco Chronicle's Mick LaSalle wrote "Down With Love is superior to Far From Heaven", which "seems naive in comparison" because "Down with Love is a very smart, very shrewd movie, and the smartest, shrewdest thing about it is the way it masquerades as just a fluffy comedy, a diversion, a trifle. Hardly a trifle, Down With Love distills 40 years of sexual politics into 100 minutes, using the romantic-comedy conventions of an earlier time to comment on the governing social assumptions of yesterday—and today, as well... The brilliance of Down With Love is that it slyly reminds us that our modern perspective, like every 'modern perspective' that preceded it, is doomed to obsolescence and isn't some final stage of enlightened social thought."[9]

Opposing opinions even occurred at the same newspaper, as was the case with The New York Observer, where Rex Reed's review was headlined "Down With Down With Love!"[10] but Andrew Sarris's headline countered with "It's Affectionate and Smart, And I'm Down With Love".[11]

Richard Corliss of Time admired Orlandi's costumes and Laws' design for their "giddily precise exaggeration" and wrote that the script "has a gentle heart to humanize its sharp sitcom wit," advising his readers to "stay for the movie's denouement: a two-minute speech that wraps up the plot like Christmas ribbons around a time bomb". But he found the film to be "miscast at the top" and "conflicted about its subject—it both derides and adores what it means to parody" and that director "Reed often uses a gong where chimes would do." Corliss concludes: "As you see, we too are conflicted about this film. We want to love it, but like a Rock Hudson rake, we keep finding fault in its allure. We want to hate it, but like Doris Day, we finally can't say no".[5]

Nathan Rabin wrote that Chicago critics by and large embraced Down With Love, noting: "It got two thumbs up from Ebert & Roeper and was No. 2 on the Top 10 list of Chicago Reader critic Jonathan Rosenbaum,[12] who called it a "masterpiece" and wrote "If a more interesting and entertaining Hollywood movie than Down with Love has come along this year, I've missed it".[13]

In the years after its release, Rabin and Rosenbaum in an updated piece[14] and Richard Brody at The New Yorker are among the critics and film theorists that have continued to write in praise of the film.[15]

Down with Love current holds a 60% approval rating at review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on reviews from 179 critics, with an average rating of 6.10/10. The site's consensus states: "Looks great, but Zellweger and McGregor have no chemistry together, and the self-satisfied, knowing tone grates".[16] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 52 out of 100 based on 39 critics' reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[17]

In August 2018 the magazine Vanity Fair put Down With Love at Number 13 on their list of the top "25 Best Romantic Comedies of All Time".[18] In June 2017 Chicago critic Jonathan Rosenbaum named Down With Love one of his "25 Favorite Films of the 21st Century (so far)".[19]

Music

The film's title comes from the song "Down with Love" as sung by Judy Garland, who is seen singing it on The Ed Sullivan Show in one scene.

The song "Here's to Love" sung by Zellweger and McGregor during the closing credits (and in its entirety on the DVD release as a special feature) was a last-minute addition to the film. Songwriters Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman appear in the number as the bartender and the pianist. According to the DVD commentary, it was added at the suggestion of McGregor, who pointed out the opportunity the filmmakers had to unite the stars of two recently popular musical films (his Moulin Rouge! and Zellweger's Chicago).

The songs "Kissing a Fool" and "For Once in My Life", sung by Michael Bublé, previously appeared on Bublé's 2003 self-titled album.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Performer(s)Length
1."Down with Love"Edgar Yipsel Harburg; Harold ArlenMichael Bublé and Holly Palmer2:31
2."Barbara Arrives"Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman2:08
3."Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)"Bart HowardFrank Sinatra and Count Basie and His Orchestra2:30
4."One Mint Julep"Rudy ToombsXavier Cugat and His Orchestra3:06
5."For Once in My Life"Ron Miller; Orlando MurdenMichael Bublé2:33
6."Girls Night Out"Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman1:00
7."Everyday Is a Holiday (With You)"Jenny-Bea Englishman; Sean LennonEsthero2:59
8."Kissing a Fool"George MichaelMichael Bublé4:35
9."Barbara Meets Zip"Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman4:08
10."Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)"Bart HowardAstrud Gilberto2:20
11."Love in Three Acts"Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman6:52
12."Here's to Love"Marc Shaiman; Scott WittmanRenée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor3:10
Total length:37:52

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Down with Love (2003)". British Film Institute. Retrieved January 3, 2021.
  2. ^ a b Lyman, Rick (May 11, 2003). "SUMMER MOVIES; Looking For the Look Of 'Love'". The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Down with Love". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved October 3, 2010.
  4. ^ a b Corliss, Richard (May 19, 2003). "That Old Feeling, Doris Day, Rock All Night". Time.
  5. ^ a b Corliss, Richard (May 11, 2003). "I Hear America Smirking". Time.
  6. ^ a b Scott, A. O. (May 9, 2003). "Film Review; Trading Barbs, Like Doris And Rock". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Hernandez, Eugene "Down with Love to Kick-Off Second Tribeca Fest"
  8. ^ "Down with Love Movie Review & Film Summary". Roger Ebert. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  9. ^ LaSalle, Mick (May 16, 2003). "Up with 'Down' / Behind retro-fluff look is a smart view of sex, American style". San Francisco Chronicle.
  10. ^ Reed, Rex "Down With Down With Love!" The New York Observer May 19, 2003
  11. ^ Sarris, Andrew It's Affectionate and Smart, And I'm Down With Love The New York Observer May 26, 2003 Archived: [1]
  12. ^ Rabin, Nathan Ribald Retro Case File #146: 'Down With Love' My Year Of Flops The A.V. Club, Sept 16 2009 [2]
  13. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan What's Past Is More Than Prologue Chicago Reader July 10, 2003 [3]
  14. ^ Rosenbaum, Jonathan Down With Love (2003) Revised 2009 "Written for The Unquiet American: Transgressive Comedies from the U.S., a catalogue/collection put together to accompany a film series at the Austrian Filmmuseum and the Viennale in Autumn 2009"[4]
  15. ^ Brody, Richard (December 29, 2009). "Down With Love". The New Yorker.
  16. ^ "Down with Love (2003)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  17. ^ "Down with Love Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  18. ^ "The 25 Best Romantic Comedies of All Time". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2018-12-01.
  19. ^ "My 25 Favorite Films of the 21st Century (so far) | Jonathan Rosenbaum". www.jonathanrosenbaum.net. Retrieved 2018-12-01.

External links

down, with, love, song, song, taiwanese, series, series, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newsp. For the song see Down with Love song For the Taiwanese TV series see Down with Love TV series This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Down with Love news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Down with Love is a 2003 American romantic comedy film directed by Peyton Reed It stars Renee Zellweger and Ewan McGregor and is a pastiche of the early 1960s American no sex sex comedies 4 such as Pillow Talk and Lover Come Back both starring Rock Hudson Doris Day and Tony Randall and the myriad spawn 5 of derivative films that followed Time film critic Richard Corliss wrote that Down with Love is so clogged with specific references to a half dozen Rock and Doris type comedies that it serves as definitive distillation of the genre 4 Randall himself plays a small role in Down with Love bestowing his sly patriarchal blessing 6 on the film which also stars David Hyde Pierce in the neurotic best friend role often played by Randall or Gig Young Sarah Paulson Rachel Dratch Jeri Ryan and Jack Plotnick who spoofs the kind of role Chet Stratton played in Lover Come Back Down with LoveTheatrical release posterDirected byPeyton ReedScreenplay byEve Ahlert Dennis DrakeProduced byDan Jinks Bruce CohenStarringRenee Zellweger Ewan McGregor David Hyde Pierce Sarah Paulson Tony RandallCinematographyJeff CronenwethEdited byLarry BockMusic byMarc ShaimanProductioncompaniesFox 2000 Pictures 1 Regency Enterprises 1 ITI Cinema Plateau Film Malzemeleri Mediastream III 1 Jinks Cohen Company 1 Distributed by20th Century FoxRelease datesMay 9 2003 2003 05 09 New York City May 16 2003 2003 05 16 United States December 25 2003 2003 12 25 Germany Running time102 minutesCountriesUnited States Turkey Poland Germany 1 LanguageEnglishBudget 35 million 2 Box office 39 5 million 3 Typical of the genre the film tells the story of a woman who advocates female independence in combat with a lothario the plot reflects the attitudes and behaviour of the early pre sexual revolution 1960s but has an anachronistic conclusion driven by more modern post feminist ideas and attitudes Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Style 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 5 Music 6 Track listing 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditIn 1962 aspiring author Barbara Novak arrives in New York to submit her book Down with Love to Banner House publishing It is about freeing women from love enjoying sex without commitment and replacing the need for a man with things such as chocolate Barbara believes her rules will help boost women in the workplace and the world in general When Banner House s male executives reject the book Vikki Hiller Barbara s editor suggests Barbara meet with Catcher Block a successful writer for Know magazine and a notorious ladies man to help promote the book However Catcher repeatedly avoids meeting Barbara until fed up she insults him Catcher s boss and best friend Peter MacMannus and Vikki develop a mutual attraction but neither is brave enough to express their feelings Peter feels overshadowed by Catcher s strong personality and Vikki wants to see strength in her lover even assuming Peter must be gay Barbara and Vikki persuade Judy Garland to sing Down with Love on The Ed Sullivan Show to promote the book Sales skyrocket as women around the world rebel against their men Catcher now wants to meet Barbara but she rejects him The breaking point comes as Barbara appears on a national TV show and discusses a chapter from her book The Worst Kind of Man and cites Catcher Block as the perfect example causing the women he dates to reject him Catcher schemes to prove Barbara really wants love and marriage like every other woman He poses as Major Zip Martin a polite and attentive astronaut Barbara is immediately infatuated with a man who seems unaware of her celebrity in contrast to the men who now avoid her since her book was published As Zip takes her to fashionable New York locations he maintains sexual tension by feigning naivete and a desire to remain chaste until he is ready for a physical relationship His plan becomes complicated after he starts falling for her When Barbara encounters Catcher Zip at a party which nearly exposes his true identity he decides to take things to the next level He tells her Catcher Block wants to interview him for an expose on the NASA space program and asks her to be there At his apartment he sets everything up to record her saying she loves him Just as they are about to have sex one of his lovers Gwendolyn walks in Not knowing who Barbara is she exposes Catcher s identity forcing him to confess to Barbara Barbara then reveals she is actually Nancy Brown one of Catcher s many former secretaries who d fallen love with him whilst working at Know She had turned down a date with him refusing to be another fling She wanted to be different from the other women he knew and make him fall in love with her Catcher proclaims he wants to marry her but Gwendolyn having overheard Barbara Novak s name thanks her for what she has done for womankind Barbara realizes she does not want love or Catcher as she has become a real down with love girl Vikki and Peter s relationship also changes when she insults him for helping Catcher Peter says he is indeed like any other man and takes Vikki to Catcher s apartment to have passionate sex with her Days later Catcher is completely depressed and has failed to win back Barbara Even his expose which he wrote on how falling in love with her made him a better man is ruined now that Barbara has told her story in her own magazine Now Catcher goes to Now on the pretense of a job interview He tells Barbara how much she has changed him and wishes there could be a middle ground for them somewhere between her confident blonde persona and her original brunette self After he leaves her office she surprises him on the elevator showing him a bright red hair style She has found the middle ground and wants to be with him They elope to Las Vegas inspiring Vikki and Peter to also get married The end credits show Barbara and Catcher s marriage has resulted in a new book aimed at ending the battle of the sexes The pair sing Here s to Love Cast EditRenee Zellweger as Barbara Novak Ewan McGregor as Catcher Block Sarah Paulson as Vikki Hiller David Hyde Pierce as Peter MacMannus Rachel Dratch as Gladys Jack Plotnick as Maurice Tony Randall as Theodore Banner John Aylward as E G Warren Munson as C B Matt Ross as J B Michael Ensign as J R Timothy Omundson as R J Jeri Ryan as Gwendolyn Ivana Milicevic as Yvette Melissa George as Elkie Dorie Barton as Sally Chris Parnell as TV EmceeStyle EditThe sets costumes cinematography editing score opening credits and visual effects including split screen shots during phone calls heavily laced with double entendres between the two leads are carefully designed to echo the style of 1960s comedies The New York City skyline of 1962 was digitally recreated for backdrops A greenscreen technique was used to simulate unconvincing 1960s rear projection using restored street footage from the late 1950s and early 1960s The film begins with the 1960s logos for 20th Century Fox and for CinemaScope a wide screen process introduced in the 1950s developed and owned by 20th Century Fox with the 1998 version of the fanfare composed by Alfred Newman The Regency Enterprises logo is in pink and contains a saxophone jazz rendition of its theme Reception EditBox office Edit Down with Love was chosen as the perfect film to open the second Tribeca Film Festival where it made its premiere 7 The film opened first in New York and was released country wide a week later May 16 2003 The film was released as counter programming against The Matrix Reloaded 2 The film performed worse than expected original research earning 40 million at the international box office 3 Critical response Edit At the time of its release Down With Love received extremely varying reviews Chicago Sun Times critic Roger Ebert spoke of the film fairly positively saying parts were fun and describing Zellweger s speech at the end as a torrent of words pouring out from her character s innermost soul 8 A O Scott in The New York Times praised director Reed s buoyant homage Zellweger s Doris Day like ability to swivel engagingly between goofiness and sex appeal McGregor s Sinatra like wiry wolfish energy and screenwriters Ahlert s and Drake s canny cocktail of period vernacular and deliberately labored double entendres finding the movie intelligent and amusing with a glorious hectic artificiality But he questioned the point of the exercise compared to Todd Haynes Far from Heaven which plunged into the subtext of those old movies whereas Down with Love being an updating and a critique snips that subtext away making it less sophisticated than what it imitates 6 Conversely The San Francisco Chronicle s Mick LaSalle wrote Down With Love is superior to Far From Heaven which seems naive in comparison because Down with Love is a very smart very shrewd movie and the smartest shrewdest thing about it is the way it masquerades as just a fluffy comedy a diversion a trifle Hardly a trifle Down With Love distills 40 years of sexual politics into 100 minutes using the romantic comedy conventions of an earlier time to comment on the governing social assumptions of yesterday and today as well The brilliance of Down With Love is that it slyly reminds us that our modern perspective like every modern perspective that preceded it is doomed to obsolescence and isn t some final stage of enlightened social thought 9 Opposing opinions even occurred at the same newspaper as was the case with The New York Observer where Rex Reed s review was headlined Down With Down With Love 10 but Andrew Sarris s headline countered with It s Affectionate and Smart And I m Down With Love 11 Richard Corliss of Time admired Orlandi s costumes and Laws design for their giddily precise exaggeration and wrote that the script has a gentle heart to humanize its sharp sitcom wit advising his readers to stay for the movie s denouement a two minute speech that wraps up the plot like Christmas ribbons around a time bomb But he found the film to be miscast at the top and conflicted about its subject it both derides and adores what it means to parody and that director Reed often uses a gong where chimes would do Corliss concludes As you see we too are conflicted about this film We want to love it but like a Rock Hudson rake we keep finding fault in its allure We want to hate it but like Doris Day we finally can t say no 5 Nathan Rabin wrote that Chicago critics by and large embraced Down With Love noting It got two thumbs up from Ebert amp Roeper and was No 2 on the Top 10 list of Chicago Reader critic Jonathan Rosenbaum 12 who called it a masterpiece and wrote If a more interesting and entertaining Hollywood movie than Down with Love has come along this year I ve missed it 13 In the years after its release Rabin and Rosenbaum in an updated piece 14 and Richard Brody at The New Yorker are among the critics and film theorists that have continued to write in praise of the film 15 Down with Love current holds a 60 approval rating at review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on reviews from 179 critics with an average rating of 6 10 10 The site s consensus states Looks great but Zellweger and McGregor have no chemistry together and the self satisfied knowing tone grates 16 On Metacritic the film has a score of 52 out of 100 based on 39 critics reviews indicating mixed or average reviews 17 In August 2018 the magazine Vanity Fair put Down With Love at Number 13 on their list of the top 25 Best Romantic Comedies of All Time 18 In June 2017 Chicago critic Jonathan Rosenbaum named Down With Love one of his 25 Favorite Films of the 21st Century so far 19 Music EditThe film s title comes from the song Down with Love as sung by Judy Garland who is seen singing it on The Ed Sullivan Show in one scene The song Here s to Love sung by Zellweger and McGregor during the closing credits and in its entirety on the DVD release as a special feature was a last minute addition to the film Songwriters Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman appear in the number as the bartender and the pianist According to the DVD commentary it was added at the suggestion of McGregor who pointed out the opportunity the filmmakers had to unite the stars of two recently popular musical films his Moulin Rouge and Zellweger s Chicago The songs Kissing a Fool and For Once in My Life sung by Michael Buble previously appeared on Buble s 2003 self titled album Track listing EditNo TitleWriter s Performer s Length1 Down with Love Edgar Yipsel Harburg Harold ArlenMichael Buble and Holly Palmer2 312 Barbara Arrives Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman2 083 Fly Me to the Moon In Other Words Bart HowardFrank Sinatra and Count Basie and His Orchestra2 304 One Mint Julep Rudy ToombsXavier Cugat and His Orchestra3 065 For Once in My Life Ron Miller Orlando MurdenMichael Buble2 336 Girls Night Out Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman1 007 Everyday Is a Holiday With You Jenny Bea Englishman Sean LennonEsthero2 598 Kissing a Fool George MichaelMichael Buble4 359 Barbara Meets Zip Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman4 0810 Fly Me to the Moon In Other Words Bart HowardAstrud Gilberto2 2011 Love in Three Acts Marc ShaimanMarc Shaiman6 5212 Here s to Love Marc Shaiman Scott WittmanRenee Zellweger and Ewan McGregor3 10Total length 37 52References Edit a b c d e Down with Love 2003 British Film Institute Retrieved January 3 2021 a b Lyman Rick May 11 2003 SUMMER MOVIES Looking For the Look Of Love The New York Times Retrieved May 7 2018 a b Down with Love Box Office Mojo Retrieved October 3 2010 a b Corliss Richard May 19 2003 That Old Feeling Doris Day Rock All Night Time a b Corliss Richard May 11 2003 I Hear America Smirking Time a b Scott A O May 9 2003 Film Review Trading Barbs Like Doris And Rock The New York Times Hernandez Eugene Down with Love to Kick Off Second Tribeca Fest Down with Love Movie Review amp Film Summary Roger Ebert Retrieved July 3 2017 LaSalle Mick May 16 2003 Up with Down Behind retro fluff look is a smart view of sex American style San Francisco Chronicle Reed Rex Down With Down With Love The New York Observer May 19 2003 Sarris Andrew It s Affectionate and Smart And I m Down With Love The New York Observer May 26 2003 Archived 1 Rabin Nathan Ribald Retro Case File 146 Down With Love My Year Of Flops The A V Club Sept 16 2009 2 Rosenbaum Jonathan What s Past Is More Than Prologue Chicago Reader July 10 2003 3 Rosenbaum Jonathan Down With Love 2003 Revised 2009 Written for The Unquiet American Transgressive Comedies from the U S a catalogue collection put together to accompany a film series at the Austrian Filmmuseum and the Viennale in Autumn 2009 4 Brody Richard December 29 2009 Down With Love The New Yorker Down with Love 2003 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved March 29 2021 Down with Love Reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved March 29 2021 The 25 Best Romantic Comedies of All Time Vanity Fair Retrieved 2018 12 01 My 25 Favorite Films of the 21st Century so far Jonathan Rosenbaum www jonathanrosenbaum net Retrieved 2018 12 01 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Down with Love Down with Love at IMDb Down with Love at AllMovie Down with Love at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Down with Love amp oldid 1124729362, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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