Nurse Betty (2000)

Nurse Betty (2000)




Synopsis

After two acclaimed independent films in which he took a troubling look at male/female relations, director Neil LaBute moves on to less controversial ground in this dark comedy. Betty Sizemore (Renee Zellweger) is a woman from Kansas City who waits tables at a diner and is married to an insensitive thug named Del (Aaron Eckhart). One of Betty's few pleasures in life is the soap opera A Reason to Love. Her favorite character is handsome Dr. David Ravell, played by George McCord (Greg Kinnear). One night, Del gets involved in a drug deal with a pair of gangsters, Charlie (Morgan Freeman) and his sidekick Wesley (Chris Rock). Del's thoughtless racial slurs lead to an arguement, and the short-tempered Wesley attacks him; Charlie is forced to kill Del, as Betty watches. Dazed and in shock, Betty hops into her car, deciding that the time is right for a date with destiny. Betty tracks down George McCord, and soon the soap's producer Lyla (Allison Janney) is considering Betty for a part on A Reason to Love, not realizing that Betty doesn't want to play Dr. Ravell's nurse and fiance, she wants to be her. Betty, meanwhile, has no idea that the drugs that Del was trying to sell are still in her car, and that Charlie and Wesley are hot on her trail, determined to get the dope and silence her once and for all. Nurse Betty also features Kathleen Wilhoite, Crispin Glover, and Pruitt Taylor Vince. The film was shown in competition at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the prize for Best Screenplay.

What Critics Say


Fantasy collides with reality when a soap-addicted housewife (Zellweger) witnesses her estranged husband's murder. Shocked out of reality and into a fantasy world, she sets out to L.A. to find the man of her dreams, dashing daytime-drama doctor David Ravell (Greg Kinnear). But she has no grasp that her "ex-fiancé" is simply an actor named George, and two determined hit men (Morgan Freeman and Chris Rock) are hot on her trail.

Acting

Upbeat and in a dreamlike state for much of the picture, Zellweger wins you over from the get-go with her optimistic portrayal of a lost soul with a heart of gold. Kinnear gamely parodies his smarmy personality as the smug star who may actually have a conscience. Rock and Freeman kill, literally and figuratively, as the bickering hit-man duo on a quest for a last job, and Crispin Glover ("Back to the Future") pops up for an amusing bit part. Where has this guy been lately?

Direction

LaBute, who wrote and directed his last two films, created a definite niche with the twisted humor and misogynistic overtones of "In the Company of Men" and "Your Friends & Neighbors." In his latest outing, he directs from a well-written screenplay by newcomers John C. Richards and James Flamberg. "Nurse Betty" ranks as a marked departure from LaBute's standard fare, but it's a definite step towards a more mature and confident style of directing. With comic timing reminiscent of David O Russell's "Flirting With Disaster," LaBute's shocking bouts of intermittent violence are a bit excessive for such a sweet and goofy tale, but work effectively to flesh out the harshness of the real world against Betty's dreamy unreality.

Bottom Line

This "Betty" is one of the finest-written surprises of the year.

Spill.com puts a whole new spin on the "classic" movie review; turning dorky and dry into hilarious and hip. Spill's reviews are high-quality animated videos featuring a regular cast of comic personalities.

Rovi Data Solutions, Inc. - Portions of Content Provided by Rovi Data Solutions © 2009 Rovi Data Solutions, Inc.

Advertisement

Create a Fan Site
Are you a Nurse Betty (2000) superfan? Create your own fan site on Hollywood.com Click Here!
Advertisement

Whats on Hollywood.com

Actors 302,663

Photos 442,104

Videos 12,383

Fan Pages 128,061

Reviews 2,424

Trailers 4,960

TV 129,006

Movies 269,364




Isn't It Time You Went Hollywood ®
©1999-2012 Hollywood.com, LLC