Sattuman kauppaa (2007)

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Sattuman kauppaa (2007). 1h 40m | K-7

“In a featurette on the DVD release version of THEN SHE FOUND ME writer (with Alice Arlen and Victor Levin) /producer/director Helen Hunt shares a ten year journey to have a film made of a novel by Elinor Lipman. Her cast shares in the very sentimental story of Huntu0026#39;s devotion and seemingly endless charisma and abilities. The explanation for making this budget film are in many ways more successful than the film, a work the cast seems determined to classify as a comedy but a work that is far more a human drama. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eApril Epner (Helen Hunt) is married to fellow schoolteacher Ben Green (Matthew Broderick) and longs to have a baby before her advancing age prevents her dream. April was adopted as an infant by a Jewish couple who subsequently gave birth to Aprilu0026#39;s brother Freddy (Ben Shenkman): April has always longed to have been Freddyu0026#39;s biological equal, wondering what it would feel like NOT to be adopted. Aprilu0026#39;s busy life implodes: Ben has decided he doesnu0026#39;t like his life and leaves April, Aprilu0026#39;s mother dies, April meets Frank (Colin Firth) a recently divorced writer and father of two children, and April is contacted by a man who can put April in touch with her birth mother – popular TV talk show hostess Bernice Graves (Bette Midler). And if these turns of events werenu0026#39;t traumatic enough, April discovers that she has become pregnant by Ben and Ben is unsure whether he can handle the restructuring of his life to accommodate April. Cautiously April and Frank begin a rather tenuous courtship which is almost immediately threatened by Aprilu0026#39;s discovery of her pregnant state. April and Bernice meet, exchange backgrounds, and make pacts to test their biologic relationship. How each of these characters makes promises that eventually damage each other and then resolve in unexpected ways becomes a study of the meaning of love and compassion among fragile human beings. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhile not a satisfying story on every level and a film too cluttered with inconvenient editing choices, the cast is strong and obviously committed, and the story (neither a comedy or a drama but a mixture of the two) tests credibility. But there are some fine moments and the lessons in human behavior are worth examining. Not a great movie but a strong little small budget film. Grady Harp”

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