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Down with Love

  • 2003
  • PG-13
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
46K
YOUR RATING
Ewan McGregor and Renée Zellweger in Down with Love (2003)
Pre, "Coming Soon"
Play trailer0:34
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Feel-Good RomanceParodyRomantic ComedySatireComedyRomance

In 1962 New York City, love blossoms between a playboy journalist and a feminist advice author.In 1962 New York City, love blossoms between a playboy journalist and a feminist advice author.In 1962 New York City, love blossoms between a playboy journalist and a feminist advice author.

  • Director
    • Peyton Reed
  • Writers
    • Eve Ahlert
    • Dennis Drake
  • Stars
    • Ewan McGregor
    • Renée Zellweger
    • David Hyde Pierce
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    46K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peyton Reed
    • Writers
      • Eve Ahlert
      • Dennis Drake
    • Stars
      • Ewan McGregor
      • Renée Zellweger
      • David Hyde Pierce
    • 331User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 52Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos3

    Down with Love
    Trailer 0:34
    Down with Love
    Down with Love
    Trailer 0:34
    Down with Love
    Down with Love
    Trailer 0:34
    Down with Love
    Down with Love
    Trailer 2:09
    Down with Love

    Photos113

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Ewan McGregor
    Ewan McGregor
    • Catcher Block
    Renée Zellweger
    Renée Zellweger
    • Barbara Novak
    David Hyde Pierce
    David Hyde Pierce
    • Peter MacMannus
    Sarah Paulson
    Sarah Paulson
    • Vikki Hiller
    Rachel Dratch
    Rachel Dratch
    • Gladys
    Jack Plotnick
    Jack Plotnick
    • Maurice
    Tony Randall
    Tony Randall
    • Theodore Banner
    John Aylward
    John Aylward
    • E.G.
    Warren Munson
    • C.B.
    Matt Ross
    Matt Ross
    • J.B.
    Michael Ensign
    Michael Ensign
    • J.R.
    Timothy Omundson
    Timothy Omundson
    • R.J.
    Jeri Ryan
    Jeri Ryan
    • Gwendolyn
    Ivana Milicevic
    Ivana Milicevic
    • Yvette
    Melissa George
    Melissa George
    • Elkie
    Dorie Barton
    Dorie Barton
    • Sally
    Laura Kightlinger
    Laura Kightlinger
    • Receptionist
    Chris Parnell
    Chris Parnell
    • TV Emcee
    • Director
      • Peyton Reed
    • Writers
      • Eve Ahlert
      • Dennis Drake
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews331

    6.346.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7inkblot11

    Up with this movie! It pays great homage to the Doris & Rock films

    Barbara (Renee Zellweger) has just written a book called Down With Love. She leaves Maine and lands in New York City, where her book is about to hit the shelves. Unfortunately, the male executives at her publishing house have doubts about the new tome and are not forking over any marketing money. The lone woman at Banner publishing, Vicki, takes Barbara under her wing and they work to get the nonfiction title some fame. First, they decide to ask Catcher Block (Ewan McGregor), a prominent male writer for Know magazine, to do a cover story for the book. He postpones the interview again and again. In the meantime, Vicki and Barbara get the book mentioned on the Ed Sullivan show. Soon, copies of DWL are flying out of the bookstores, mainly because the book empowers women to think more about themselves and less about attracting a man. Catcher spies a picture of Barbara in a bookstore window and knows he has to meet her. However, since he is a notorious ladies man, he assumes the identity of an astronaut named Zip Martin. Naturally, he plays the perfect gentleman when he begins to take Barbara out on the town. How long will it be until Barbara discovers the truth? And, will she have fallen for the guy first? Romantic comedy fans everywhere should love this film. It is a takeoff of the old Doris and Rock movies that are so delightfully fun and full of clean mischief. Zellweger and McGregor are a joy in their roles as the smitten couple. The rest of the cast, including a cameo by Tony Randall, are great, too. The look of the film is nice, as are the costumes and the Big Apple setting. If you love crazy, contrived, comic love tales, get this one tonight. You will bask in its take-me-out-of-my-blues delivery.
    garboventures

    An underrated gem - glowing pastiche with a post-feminist twist

    I'm surprised to read so many user comments which indicate that Down With Love received some critical acclaim - I recall a very different response, where critics seemed hugely and almost unanimously underwhelmed (maybe this was a UK response?) and consequently, I wasn't expecting too much. This only enhanced my enjoyment - what an underrated gem this movie is!!

    I rarely like Zellwegger, but here she was pertly perfect, and McGregor was simply fabulous - dashing, charismatic, loathsome, even vulnerable, especially when he occasionally slips from his duplicitous fake self (when he notices a lash on her cheek, for example), and always delivers his lines with exquisite (and surprising) comic timing. The support cast were also excellent, especially Hyde Pierce, although he was not a 100 miles from his decade-long stint as Niles Crane.

    The set, costumes, production design and cinematography were also outstanding in this movie, evoking the brashly-coloured, kitsch, fluffy-light ambiance which pervades the early 1960s New York screwball romance movie genre, but the snippy script and slick direction removed this pastiche away from its potential as mere enchanting, screwball fable to a witty, post-feminist send-up of this Hudson/Day romcom genre - and indeed, the battle of the sexes. To its credit, Down With Love doesn't collapse completely into mawkish sentimentality with Novak (Zellwegger) suddenly capitulating into the cult of domesticity, tamed by her man, which is often the fate of modern post-feminist heroines - instead, the couple compromise, and we can be sure that she won't be confined to the suburban purgatory she comes to dread.

    In all, a fun, fab and brilliantly executed movie, which has been clearly (re)created with due love for the genre it so skillfully parodies, yet in the light of postmodern sensibilities by adding a much-needed post-feminist twist.
    8Vartiainen

    Suave, charismatic and an affectionate parody

    In my mind a good parody is always also an homage to its source material. Instead of just pointing, mocking and laughing, it respects its predecessors and while it gently pokes fun at their mistakes and general silliness, it also pays tribute to their strong points. And that's this film. It's both a parody and a love letter to those romantic comedies of the mid-century Hollywood where men and women had clearly defined roles, every background was painted, the cars were driven by madly spinning the wheel from one side to the other even though the road was perfectly straight and every single line was delivered with a suave and cocky grin on one's face.

    And as far as parodies or even movies in general go, this isn't a bad example. It has a very strong visual style, with bright, colourful sets, which feel very nostalgic, great score, clever if a bit dirty sense of humour, especially when it comes to visual humour, and a good cast of actors. Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor especially were very good in their roles and they had good chemistry together. McGregor in particular was prefect for the role of Catcher Block, a suave ladies man, who simply oozes self-confidence and charisma.

    I had no complaints about the story either, though it wasn't the film's strongest point. It's clever and witty most of the time and the scenes flow smoothly from one to another, but it had perhaps one twist too many for me to fully enjoy it. I wouldn't call it needlessly complicated, but it's not far.

    In the end I have to admit that I had a blast watching this film. It's more about the experience and the individual scenes than it is about the story, but in this case it's not a bad thing. If you're looking for a movie with great sense of humour, enjoyable characters, witty dialogues and bright colour scheme, this is definitely your film.
    cariart

    60s Retro in Comedy Spoof...

    DOWN WITH LOVE, director Peyton Reed's homage/spoof of the Doris Day/Rock Hudson sex comedies of the early 60s, is a delightful bit of fluff in a movie season filled with inferior sequels and overwrought epics. Dazzling to watch, with Givenchy-inspired costumes (if Daniel Orlandi does not receive an Oscar for his work, his peers should turn in their Designer cards), wonderfully over-the-top sets (EVERYBODY in those 60s films lived in apartments you could land airplanes in), and a 'More 1963 New York than 1963 New York' look (created on the studio back lot, with ample support from CGI), the film would deserve a viewing even if the cast never uttered a line of dialog!

    Fortunately, the script, by Eve Ahlert and Dennis Drake, is wickedly funny, full of the politically incorrect double entendres that were as close as Hollywood could get to actual 'naughtiness', 30 years ago (and, yes, there are more than a few present that WOULD have been censored, even then). The story, of a woman who writes a best-selling 'self-help' book eschewing the necessity of men for any more than 'casual sex', and the 'Hugh Hefner'-like writer who turns his prodigious charms to work, in the guise of a naive astronaut, to win her love, and thus discredit her theories, would have fit Doris Day and Rock Hudson to a 'T'. While Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor lack their role models' charisma, they have a pleasant chemistry together, and the 'split-screen' phone call scenes between the pair are even racier than the Day/Hudson 60s versions.

    If the leads seem a bit bland, the supporting cast more than makes up for any shortcomings. In a role that SHOULD garner a 'Supporting Actor' Oscar nomination, David Hyde Pierce takes on the part assumed by Tony Randall or Gig Young in those 60s farces, that of the put-upon, neurotic, sometimes prissy friend of the hero. He is superb, even SOUNDING like Tony Randall, and steals every scene he's in. His 'opposite number', friend of the heroine Sarah Paulson, while not quite at Pierce's level, is still quite funny as a chain-smoking career woman who would chuck it all for the right man. And, in a FABULOUS piece of casting, the MAN himself, Tony Randall, appears as the book publisher whose bestseller is RUINING his love life. At 83, the man can still toss off a funny line...

    With a very inventive 'twist-within-a-twist' climax, and Marc Shaiman's evocative score punctuating the proceedings, DOWN WITH LOVE is a delight!
    6perica-43151

    Corny but amusing over the top parody

    This parody of the 60s movies has zero subtlety, but is amusing and full of references. It is somewhat analytic, has some nice jokes and a lot of in-jokes, but is concerned more with commenting and it is not terribly sophisticated. Still, worth a watch, especially if you know the work Rock Hudson and his magnum opus of trivial love. Extra credit for being prescient about the absurdities of the upcoming age of over the top woke hys teria.

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    Related interests

    Omar Epps and Sanaa Lathan in Love & Basketball (2000)
    Feel-Good Romance
    Bill Pullman, John Candy, Joan Rivers, Daphne Zuniga, and Lorene Yarnell Jansson in Spaceballs (1987)
    Parody
    Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally... (1989)
    Romantic Comedy
    Peter Sellers in Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
    Satire
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The extra scene at the end with Ewan McGregor and Renée Zellweger singing a duet was filmed at the insistence of Zellweger and McGregor. They said that with both of them having been in musicals previously (McGregor in Moulin Rouge! (2001) and Zellweger in Chicago (2002)) that it would be a sin not to.
    • Goofs
      When Barbara confesses to Catcher in his apartment, they are both standing, but when Gwendolyn enters his apartment and races to Barbara after she over-hears Catcher say "Barbara Novak", Catcher is sitting on the edge of the bed.
    • Quotes

      Catcher Block: [as Zip Martin] Can you keep a secret?

      Barbara Novak: Yes.

      Catcher Block: [as Zip Martin] Me too.

    • Crazy credits
      The movie opens with the big CinemaScope logo 20th Century Fox used fifty years before.
    • Alternate versions
      The TV version distributed in the UK excludes most of the split-screen phone call, presumably for time and due to the potential interpretation of the cinematography.
    • Connections
      Edited from Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957)
    • Soundtracks
      Down with Love
      Music by Harold Arlen

      Lyrics by E.Y. Harburg

      Performed by Michael Bublé and Holly Palmer

      Produced by Marc Shaiman

      Michael Bublé appears courtesy of 143/Reprise Records

      Holly Palmer appears courtesy of Reprise Records

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 16, 2003 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • New Regency Productions (United States)
      • Stream Down with Love on Disney+ Hotstar
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hãy ngừng yêu
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood Center Studios - 1040 N. Las Palmas Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Fox 2000 Pictures
      • New Regency Productions
      • Jinks/Cohen Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $35,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $20,305,251
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $45,029
      • May 11, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $39,468,111
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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