“The Intern” offers sugary-sweet smiles but crashes in the third act
Writer/director: Nancy Meyers
Starring: Anne Hathaway, Robert De Niro, Rene Russo
Release Date: September 25, 2015
Sugar and spice and everything nice, that’s what About the Fit is made of. Well, that is not exactly true, but the tone of the Anne Hathaway and Robert De Niro comedy, “The Intern”, certainly feels that way. What is About the Fit, you ask? It is Jules’s (Hathaway) internet clothing business which has exploded from just a laptop on her kitchen table to a bustling 220-employee company located in a picturesque, remodeled warehouse in Brooklyn.
About the Fit is company where 20-somethings smile, laugh, type, and swipe on their PCs, tablets and phones while helping market the perfect outfits to an ever-growing, national customer base. Jules dresses for success, is always working and bikes (yes, bikes) in between a constant flow of five-minute meetings within the office. With sunshine beaming through the massive windows into a space of mortar, brick and bright white walls – which contain a flow of happy job-lovers - I certainly wanted to connect my LinkedIn account with everyone in that office! Okay, I am being a bit sarcastic, but after about 15 minutes of this rainbows and lollipops atmosphere, I stopped rolling my eyes and bought into the fun. Written and directed by Nancy Meyers (“Something’s Gotta Give”, “It’s Complicated”), she found the right level of movie magic to turn smiles on even the grumpiest of cynics. Just about everything in this film is cute and sweet from Jules’s six-year-old daughter to video-game driven millennial men who ask dumb questions about love.
With “love” spread in every direction, the film’s tension comes in the form of 70-year-old Ben (De Niro). About the Fit “accidentally” creates a senior intern program but not seniors in high school or college. They hire three seniors in life, as three senior citizens become six-week interns. They might not have LinkedIn or Facebook accounts, but they own real-life experience, and Ben was a seasoned and disciplined executive. While retired, he kept looking for a reason to put on his dress shirt, tie and suit to continue to make a difference in this world. He may be a former exec, but not the cutthroat type. Ben is a nice guy, and he wants to put his best seven-decade foot forward.
Meyers, of course, includes plenty of age-gap gags between Ben and his new co-workers, but the differences melt away as this senior and the “kids” bridge their differences and learn from one another. In fact, Ben and his three new sweatshirt-wearing compadres pull a hilarious heist in a major comedic high-point of the movie. Jules and Ben’s friendship and working relationship has the potential to grow too, but hey, we tend to expect that with a predictable, but entertaining story arc.
Speaking of story arcs, for me, the film falls down a quite a bit in the third act. After buying into the movie’s light tone and enjoying the ride, the script takes a completely unnecessary left turn and introduces a sudden and unpleasant plot point. I shook my head in massive disapproval when this unattractive nugget of conflict presented itself on the big screen. I did not object because it was a “too difficult to swallow” moment, but because it shook the entire upbeat tone of the picture into unwanted areas of forced struggle. The film also ties up some other loose ends within the last 10 minutes, and with a running time of 2 hours and 1 minute, one wonders why the “cut and throw away” button was so amiss in the editing room.
Still, “The Intern” is mostly a pleasant time at the movies, and Hathaway and De Niro have their charm dials set to 11. I enjoyed this film but also left disappointed. In this particular case, the script should have allowed sugar and spice to sweeten the picture from the opening credits to its fade to black. (2.5/4 stars)

A Brilliant Young Mind
Interview – Oren Moverman, director “Time Out of Mind”
By Jeff Mitchell
people. New York is quite an overwhelming city in terms of the mass volume of humanity in your face all the time. The more people there are, the more alone you can be. When you have so many people (in one place), then they (simply) do not see each other. So, I think the state of homelessness - that kind of isolation - leads to deprivation of very basic needs. The lack of eye contact or human contact just makes the problem worse for sure.
OM: That was our biggest worry: Are we going to get away with putting Richard Gere in this environment. We tested it. What we discovered – when we hid the camera, because we didn’t want the camera in people’s faces to give away the fact that we’re shooting a movie - is they didn’t recognize him at all because they didn’t look at him. It was a very deliberate, very understandable, very human, and a very New York approach. Urban dwellers would just walk past this homeless guy, and maybe someone would pay attention and maybe someone would give something, but ultimately no one looked him in the eye. It wasn’t as if he was unrecognizable as Richard Gere. He was unrecognizable as a movie star, for sure. He was unrecognizable in his clothes because that’s not how you would expect to see Richard Gere. The fact that no one looked him in the eye, it was a lesson for us when someone in that position becomes quite invisible to the people around him. He did get recognized twice in Grand Central Terminal when two people walked by him and said, “Hello”. It wasn’t sort of “Oh my God, it’s a movie star. Let me take a picture.” It was more like, “Hey, he looks like Richard Gere. It looks like he is having a hard time.”
Black Mass
Everest
Sleeping with Other People
The Visit
Director: Ken Kwapis
The Transporter Refueled
“’Learning to Drive’ never quite moves out of the slow lane”
Turbo Kid

Digging for Fire
Mistress America
“’Hitman: Agent 47’ stands out for about 47 painful reasons”
American Ultra
Straight Outta Compton