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The A&T Register

The Student News Site of North Carolina A&T State University

The A&T Register

The Student News Site of North Carolina A&T State University

The A&T Register

“Lucky One” is not so lucky

“The Lucky One” is a like a corny old silent movie to which someone made the mistake of adding sound. Based on one of Nicholas Sparks’ overripe romance novels, it’s about a stoic, sensitive man who falls for a beautiful, but wounded woman, who must escape from the iron grip of her violent ex-husband.

“The Lucky One” is a like a corny old silent movie to which someone made the mistake of adding sound. Based on one of Nicholas Sparks’ overripe romance novels, it’s about a stoic, sensitive man who falls for a beautiful, but wounded woman, who must escape from the iron grip of her violent ex-husband.

For good measure, the movie also includes some hambone Hallmark-style narration about destiny and luck and choosing the right path in life, along with a few sun-baked shots of dogs romping through the grass.

Zac Efron,has beefed-up and quit smiling a sure sign the young actor is desperate for us to take him seriously.

He travels on foot from Colorado to Louisiana, with his loyal German shepherd in tow, to track down a mysterious woman whose picture he found in the middle of a combat zone in Iraq.

Her name is Beth (Taylor Schilling), and her brother was killed in the war under mysterious circumstances. Boy usually meets girl, and fate or family or leukemia contrive to keep them apart.

Until now the best thing that could be said for him is that he’s avoided devolving into utter tastelessness.

But the screenplay adaptation uses the tragedies of the war in Iraq as cheap fodder and uneasy metaphor, about how we must constantly be seeking renewal even when the bullets are raining down upon us.

Arriving in Louisiana, Logan quickly finds Beth, who works at a kennel with her grandmother (Blythe Danner) on the bucolic outskirts of their bucolic small town, and worms his way into their lives though somehow he’s never able to tell her why he’s walked all this way from Colorado in the first place.

Beth is initially suspicious of him, but then she gets a glimpse of Logan tossing heavy bags of dog food around, all sensitive man sweat and decorously smudged dirt on his forehead, and from that point on she’s a goner.

The fact that this story contains not a single unpredictable turn isn’t necessarily the problem: Hollywood romances are supposed to telegraph and delay the inevitable gratification. But there’s also no heat or spark in

“The Lucky One,” nothing to make us care. Efron and Schilling are both lovely-looking specimens, evenly tanned and absent of any discernible fat cells yet they don’t seem like real people, and they hardly seem turned on by one another.

At the screening I attended, the love scene sent titters through the audience, not because of any unruly passion, but because it is glowingly lit and woodenly performed like soft porn, except PG-13 rated.

The ending of the movie is even more laughable, with a pounding rain storm and a rickety rope bridge and the requisite child-in-peril screaming for his life.

This movie’s shamelessness knows no depths. The lucky one is anyone smart enough to stay home.

  • Christopher Kelly, MCT Campus
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