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Never mind that The Prince & Me is utterly predictable.
Its also utterly charming. Director Martha Coolidge, writers Katherine Fugate, Jack
Amiel and Michael Begler and stars Julia Stiles and Luke Mably update a familiar premise
with loads of humor, respect and breeziness, resulting in one of the most enjoyable
romantic comedies of the new millennium.
Even though the movie is no Roman
Holiday, the filmmakers happily allude to the classic picture: The title
character, bad-boy Prince Edvard of Denmark (Mably), comes across the film while watching
TV, during a fateful channel-surfing session. After he passes on a gleeful Audrey Hepburn
riding a bike, hes captivated by a commercial for a porn video starring buxom co-eds
from the Midwest. And so, he tells his parents (Miranda Richardson and James Fox) that
hes enrolling in college in America. The king and queen arent necessarily
unhappy to see him go, because his recent rebellious high jinks with fast cars and ladies
had been landing him on the front page of the tabloids often enough to disturb their sense
of royal propriety.
The prince goes under cover, simply as a student from Denmark,
"Eddie," to a Wisconsin college, where he meets the brainy Paige (Stiles), a
serious pre-med student who tells her friends shes devoting her semester to studies,
not parties and boys. Paige, of course, immediately dislikes glib Eddie, who ends up as
her chemistry lab partner, and who cajoles her into helping him get a job at the local bar
where she works.
Even though Eddie is sassy and insensitive, Paige does admit hes
cute, and, little by little, shes taken by him, especially when he helps her
decipher a sonnet by Shakespeare for a blasted literature class she has to take.
Stiles, always an actress with a straightforward sense of purpose,
gives Paige undeniable appeal. With not an ounce of Hollywood glitz or pretension in her
pleasantly low-key performance, shes entirely winning as an intelligent farm girl
intent on becoming a doctor. Mably, in the flashier role, nicely plays all sides of the
prince. Because hes used to being in the limelight and getting his way, he can be a
big jerk. But he also knows how to deal with people, as well as how to be polite.
Hes got a great look, too. Hes elegant in those close-fitted royal jackets
he and Stiles appear to have about the same tiny waist size -- and gosh darned
adorable in jeans and T-shirts on campus.
A pivotal, truly endearing scene has Eddie at home with Paige on
Thanksgiving weekend. Their holiday dinner conversation steers to the topics of Hamlet
and Eddies home, about which Paige candidly, unknowingly, asks, "Does
Denmark even have a prince?" while Eddie regales her brothers with the names of
famous Danes, including Kierkegaard and Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich. Its funny.
The dialogue is sharp and steady throughout. Yet another key scene is
fueled by music, not words. A song by Tom Waits, "I Hope That I Dont Fall in
Love With You" from his beautifully moving album, Closing
Time, has Paige swaying to the sweet, sad song while shes closing down the
bar. Meanwhile, Eddie, who remains unseen by Paige, watches her from across the room,
doing just that: falling in love. The moment isnt sappy or too obvious; its
simply touching.
Director Coolidge knows how to tell fun, positive stories about
complex, thoughtful young women. She triumphed in movies such as Rambling
Rose and Valley
Girl, and she does it again here. She conjures an age-old fairy tale about a girl
getting a prince into a fresh, 21st century fantasy.
- Leslie Katz