New York City forms the backdrop for writer/director Ben Younger's (BOILER ROOM) PRIME, a gentle comedy that weaves a tale of two lovers trying to keep the flame alive as an unusual obstacle is hurled in their path. Rafi Gardet (Uma Thurman) is a newly divorced 37-year-old career woman who regularly spills her woes to her therapist, Lisa Metzger (Meryl Streep). Rafi's love life takes a sudden upturn when she meets Bryan Greenberg (David Bloomberg), a penniless painter who lives on the Lower East Side with his grandparents and, at 23, is significantly younger than Rafi. Uptown girl Rafi isn't used to such differences in age and location, but the sex is great, and Bryan seems attentive enough, so she jubilantly tells Lisa in passionate detail about their blossoming relationship. The trouble is, the more Rafi tells her, the more Lisa realizes that the hot young boy-toy Rafi is busy seducing on a nightly basis is, in fact, her own son. The problems mount, with Rafi's status as a gentile not going over well with Bryan's Jewish family, and Lisa unable to decide whether to stop the therapy sessions or not.
Younger delivers a heady mixture of laughs and salient points in a film that settles snugly into familiar early-21st-century territory for romantic-comedy fans. He peppers the action with product placement, warm pastel colors in spacious FRIENDS-style New York apartments, and bitter recriminations that quickly turn to passionate makeup sex on more than one occasion. The director clearly enjoys a love affair with the city, with swooping shots throughout of the late-night Manhattan skyline providing the perfect setting as his two leads act out their bittersweet union.
Theatrical Release: October 28, 2005
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround - English, French
Subtitles - English (SDH), French, Spanish
Additional Release Material:
Commentary - Ben Younger - Director/Jennifer Todd - Producer
Deleted Scenes
Featurette - Prime-Time Players
Outtakes
Director of Photography
William Rexer: American DOP "Unmade Beds"
Music
Ryan Shore: Music, VULGAR (2001)
Review 1:
3 stars out of 5 -- "The seriously gorgeous Thurman is effortlessly funny and affecting....Hilarious and heartfelt."
Source: Rolling Stone
p.105 11/03/2005
Review 2:
"This is a tamer, if also more polished, effort, and it has some moments of energy, both comic and sexual, as well as a fondness for real Manhattan locations."
Source: New York Times
p.E1 10/28/2005
Review 3:
"Thurman oozes star quality as she essays a convincing transformation from miserable divorcee to giddy lover..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.78-79 02/01/2006
Review 4:
3 stars out of 5 -- "Thurman exudes confidence and sensuality. Streep's on good form too."
Source: Total Film
p.50 06/01/2006
Review 5:
4 stars out of 5 -- "It's a touching romance, a knowing look at familial dysfunction and a truthful exploration of society's prejudices."
Source: Ultimate DVD
p.122 10/01/2006