No Strings Attached is a 2011 American romantic comedy film starring Natalie Portman and Ashton Kutcher. The film is directed by Ivan Reitman. Emma (Portman) and Adam (Kutcher) are lifelong friends who have sex one morning and worry about their friendship being ruined. They make a pact to have "no strings attached", to have casual sex without falling in love with each other.[2] The film was released in the United States and Canada on January 21, 2011.
It’s been awhile since I’ve seen a new romantic comedy that I could watch -- nay endure. Sure there have been great movies wherein the rom-com is shoe-horned into a different genre altogether -- hello, ZOMBIELAND! -- but a real-deal rom-com that’s just unapologetically about love and relationships? It’s been awhile.
Much to my surprise, NO STRINGS ATTACHED has put an end to that desert of emotion. Sure, you quickly and rightly suspect that stars Natalie Portman (Emma) and Ashton Kutcher (Adam) will end up together, but the movie makes up for any predictability by adding a dash of realism that calls the genre on its propensity to b.s. the audience into believing relationships, make-ups, and break-ups are so simple.
What’s most refreshing about NO STRINGS ATTACHED is that it’s a romantic comedy about two grown-ups who act like self-fulfilled adults. Tired of the rom-com staple of a leading lady who must choose between her job and love because her workaholic ways keep her from realizing that her ladyparts need some attention of their own? Gone. In its place is Portman portraying a medical intern who has a firm hold of her work and life; she’s just afraid of relationships because breaking-up hurts. As for the other rom-com cliche of the leading man who’s equal parts manly man and man-child, he’s replaced by Kutcher as a production assistant/aspiring staff writer on a Glee-knock-off who is also smart and has a hold on his life -- well, except when it comes to getting out from under his father’s shadow. They’re just two normal people dealing with love and how terrifying it is, while the laughs come from their reactions and interactions with friends.
Now, I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking I have no taste because a. you’ve seen the trailers and they’re horrible and b. I’m a woman. Well, here’s why you’re wrong: for reasons I don’t understand, whomever was in charge of cutting the trailers did a terrible job. Dialogue from different parts of the movie and cut scenes seem to have been pieced together to create lines that never happened (but which you’d expect of cliche rom-coms) and some scenes in the trailer just have completely different dialogue playing over them -- stuff that doesn’t happen in the movie. Whatever movie the trailers are advertising, I hate. But NO STRINGS ATTACHED, I loved. As for your second thought, which is that you can’t trust my opinion because I’m a woman... well, if you think that then you’re probably right. If you’re the type of person to write off my opinion because I’m a woman, you’ll never understand what it is about NO STRINGS ATTACHED female-sympathetic perspective that makes it so great and so real.
Portman redefines adorable in a role that could have devolved into a one-note “Magical Pixie Dream Girl” but which she plays with nuance and brash gusto for life. If you don’t love her reenactment of a man standing in a room waving his penis around while shouting, then you must not love much in life. As for Kutcher, he’s charmingly likable without coming off as too-stupid-to-live or too-douchey-to-date. It’s hard not to feel like, halfway through the film, you really are watching two people fall in love, or rather try not to, thanks to the pair’s budding chemistry.
The rest of the cast balances out the film, without taking too much away from the main story at hand. Mindy Kaling is sexy and fun as one of Emma’s roomies/fellow interns and Lake Bell steals the show as a high-strung potential love interest.
For me, as a woman, it was satisfying and heart-warming to finally watch a rom-com that was sympathetic to women and the way we view relationships, which is not how 80 percent of rom-coms like to think we do -- and yes, plenty of female screenwriters have been guilty of perpetuating myths and made-up rules about women and love (e.g. you can only have career success or a man to love). Still, it was great to see a film that was fun, funny, and feminist. Emma gets to stay a doctor and get the guy she loves? Yes! Adam isn’t a man-child that Emma has to babysit for the rest of her life? Hurrah! They both love each other and respect each other? Cheers!
I do have my critiques of the film, though. Sometimes I felt that NO STRINGS ATTACHED pulled a few of its punches, stopping just short of being the movie it could be in the first half. But at some point after, the film went for it and took me along for the ride. There also could have been a bit more Cary Elwes (but I hold that opinion about every movie he’s in) as the respected doctor at Emma’s hospital, and more of Kaling and Emma’s other roommate, Guy (Guy Branum). While not a perfect film, and not the best romantic comedy in history, NO STRINGS ATTACHED is a change of pace that reminds me the genre is anything but dead or cliche past the point of return.
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