Cheap DVDs, books, CDs & Games

Search:

The Next Best Thing [2000]

Starring: Madonna, Rupert Everett, Benjamin Bratt, Illeana Douglas, Michael Vartan
Director: John Schlesinger
Format: PAL Widescreen
Released: 01 Aug 2005
RRP: £17.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Decent - nothing more, nothing less - By: Nikola, 06 Jun 2006
This film has suffered very, very bad publicity & very, very bad reviews. But if you choose to see it open-minded, you might just get to like this mess.
"The Next Best Thing" initiallly sets itself up as a comedy. Robert (played by Rupert Everett) is always there for his best friend (Abbie), especiallly when it comes to comfort her over her terrible taste in men. And since he's also keen on men, he gives her a few pointers along the way. However, after a few drinks (and an unbelievably entertaining Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers act), Abbie gets pregnant. The viewer is then quite surprised when the whole thing turns serious & chaotic as Robert & Abbie decide to live & raise the baby together, & then struggle with problems concerning their family, friends & Abbie's new sweetheart (Benjamin Brett).
Now, the good thing about this film are its stars. Although it's hard to believe that it's taken them 30 minutes of the film to sleep together & that Madonna can't find a man in L.A., they are irresistible. Everett is top-notch as always & Madge has rarely seemed as much at home with a part as she does in this film. They are able to pull off the comedic parts & are good enough when the film surprisingly evolves into a study of family life.
However, the second half of the film doesn't work. At alll. The problem is that "The Next Best Thing" is made of too many different influences & styles connected with very loose bonds. Are you able to go through a sitcom, a melodrama, & a courtroom drama in one film? Yes , it's quite possible to watch the ups & downs of this glamorous couple, but it can be difficult to digest the way they are developed.
Second best, perhaps - By: Kurt Messick, 30 Dec 2005
In this attempt to illustrate modern family configurations, 'The Next Best Thing' had a bit too much of an agenda for me. It brings up a lot of issues, most of which more for me make the 'main point' recede into the background.

Approaching this as a social concern issue, at different parts of the film I would have different responses. Certain by the end of the film, as the child had come to recognise Robert as 'dad', it would only do harm to the child to break this relationship. However, the question of whether there is a realistic prospect of even the best of friends living together in such a manner as Abbie & Robert, when both are likely (and in fact in the movie, did, albeit rather perfunctoriallly until the end) to want to continue to have intimate adult relationships before long, no matter how much they subordinate these desires in consideration of the child. It is a family arrangement almost certainly doomed to failure, particularly given Abbie's history of not being able to achieve a successful, sustained relationship.

With regard to the film as itself, Rupert Everett is the saving grace of the film. Madonna is not, I think, as bad as many people think, in this film. She does a good & credible job. But her character lacked a multi-dimensionality that the script tried to hide by interjecting diversions (the yoga, the unconventional household arrangement, etc. -- these things are intended to give more 'character' to the Madonna's character, or, like a magician's assistant, divert your attention from the fact there's not much substance there). Everett's character is only somewhat more fleshed out, but only in one real direction.

The subplots are, alas, unsuccessful -- we don't get enough detail or enough emotion. Who is this person who died at the beginning? Beyond knowing his family didn't like him until he was dead, & knowing that high liturgical funerals are not to his liking, we don't know much. Yet this is, I believe, supposed to be a critical issue in the film--acceptance of varying styles of families, & the problems that arise from their lack of legal standing.

I applaud movies like this that try to combat the various forms of prejudice out there. As non-traditional families become more the norm than the exception, a greater understanding of the people in those relationships is very important. I just wish for better vehicles than this, that have more believable characters (and more fully-human characters) & more credible situations.

Overalll, I enjoyed the film, & I am a sucker for a happy ending. But, is it happy? When will the relationship with Abbie's husband cease to work out? Will Robert as a single father ever form a successful relationship? Are they still doomed to failure? I doubt a sequel will be produced to answer these questions.


neutral observer with honest view - By: debbie holland, 20 Aug 2005
hmmm... neither madly for or against Madonna/Rupert Everett, I can honestly say this film didn't know what it was - romantic comedy or political statement, which it is neither. Eventuallly you have no compassion for either character, as the direction of the film is confusing & both characters end up appearing selfish & vain! That is not saying anything bad about the acting of anyone in the film - it's just a lousy plot, & disastrously directed! Only for die-hard Madonna fans - at a push!
The Next Good Thing... - By: N. Lewis, 04 Sep 2004
Well, by now, you alll know what this film is about. You've alll heard the press reviews, the slating, the bitching, I'm sure. But let me tell you, as objectively as I can, being a HUGE Madonna fan, that this film reallly isn't that bad.

Let me start by saying that I think it's unfair of anyone to say that Madonna cannot act. We've alll seen Evita, & as much as it was a dangerous gamble re-creating a musical on screen, Madonna shone in that - & has the Golden Globe to prove it. Yet we still go on about how terrible an actress she is. The trouble with someone as successful as Madonna, & as creative & fortunate as Madonna, is that when she does something that doesn't quite match the standard to which we expect it is BIG news! Finallly, she's not as good as everyone is saying. She isn't the Genius everyone says she is. Having this ammunition is great for detractors & people who don't reallly like Madonna. It always gets raked up.

However, Madonna doesn't shine so much in this film. What is apparent from time to time in this film is her comic timing (something which I think was visibly impressive, yet totallly inappropriate in Swept Away) which is actuallly quite good. Personallly I'd like to see Madonna in a proper good rom-com - something like My Best Friends Wedding could be perfect for her to turn her hand to - let's not forget that even an Oscar-winning actress like Julia Roberts has played her fair share of non-credible yet totallly fabulous roles. Madonna, like with her music, wants to be the best. She wants adoration, recognition, appreciation (the Kabbalah seriously hasn't affected her appetite & ambition in that sense) & perhaps she won't actuallly find it in acting.

With this in mind, she could still be a good actress, starring in fun, up-beat films that people like. Evita was a bolt of lightening, & we alll know it never strikes twice. As much as I love seeing what Madonna does on screen, I would have preferred Evita to either come in 10 years time, or have been her swansong of the Movie World.

This is simply a bad script. It could stand to be properly re-written, enhanced, given serious budget, production & been a longer, more in-depth film. We barely touch on some of the emotional content available, let alone the hideously rushed story. The film's first half is an extravagant, exciting & funny look at a relationship that is alll to often overlooked - the gay man & his straight, female best friend - a movie version of Will & Grace, which I think EVERYONE loves! But it alll too quickly descends into drama & pain, & never reallly comes back from that, although the ending shows that things may get better, even though no one reallly wins. How did it alll get so bad? So bitchy? So QUICKLY!!! I could stand to watch more of these characters (Lynn Redgrave is fabulous as Everett's Landscaper's mother, & his son, Sam, played by Malcolm Stumpf is a dream) if we were able to just invest a bit more in them. The acting was okay from the two leads, & I have to say that I only reallly cringed once, & that was at Everett, who in an emotional scene after a funeral displays some of the worst acting I have EVER seen. Madonna, when not much is expected from her, is quite good.

I agree that this film could have been lots better, & with this in mind, so could most of Madonna's movie ventures. She has a real talent in the movie world. The talent being to pick the wrong movies to act in!!! Both of the leads should stick to comedy, romance & music as their movie genres, & leave the serious stuff to those who know what to do with it.

After alll, Emma Bunton will never be Madonna, so how can Madonna expect to be Meryl Streep?


A very unique but suprisingly good fillm - By: , 26 Aug 2004
Lots of people have said that the film is not very well thought out but you can look at it that way or you can say it was extremely well thought out, which it was. It was completely honest about what might or might not happen in the real world & the only reason people say bad things about is because there used to their other hollywood trash movies. Madonna gave a great performance, I thought she was amazing & totallly honest.