Reviewed by: Samiatu Dosunmu
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Offensive |
Moviemaking Quality: |
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Primary Audience: | • Young-Adults • Adults |
Genre: | Satire Romance Fantasy |
Length: | 1 hr. 28 min. |
Year of Release: | 2019 |
USA Release: |
February 13, 2019 (wide—3,444 theaters) DVD: May 21, 2019 |
Real life Love doesn’t work the way it does in romance movies
The world’s inaccurate ideas about romance
Satirizing romantic comedies
Negativity
Her mom says, “Forget about love” and “Someone might marry you for a visa, but that’s about it.”
The complaint that “my weight makes me invisible to men”
SELF-IMAGE — “I’m ugly. Why was God so unfair to me this way?” Answer
Sadness
DEPRESSION—Are there biblical examples of depression and how to deal with it? Answer
What should a Christian do if overwhelmed with depression? Answer
The world tells us to “believe in yourself” and “do what you think is right”? What dangers lay in that path? Who should you truly believe in? Who truly determines what is true and right?
The important thing is not who people think you are, but rather who you really are inside—whether good or bad / Are you honorable? Loving? Truthful? Kind? Godly? Righteous? Doing good works?
TRUE LOVE—What is true love and how do you know when you have found it? Answer
For a follower of Christ, what is LOVE—a feeling, an emotion, or an action? Answer
What about Gays needs to change? Answer
Featuring |
Rebel Wilson … Natalie Liam Hemsworth … Blake Adam Devine … Josh Priyanka Chopra … Isabella Betty Gilpin … Whitney Tom Ellis … Doctor Jennifer Saunders … Natalie’s Mom See all » |
Director |
Todd Strauss-Schulson |
Producer |
BRON Studios [Canada] Camp Sugar See all » |
Distributor |
New Line Cinema, division of Warner Bros. Pictures |
“Isn’t It Romantic” is a parody about the rom-com genre where everything is perfect, including the development and ending of love stories—where the characters live happily ever after. Natalie, a pre-teen living somewhere in Australia, is watching the movie “Pretty Woman” (1990) and fantasizing about being like Julia Roberts’ character. Her mother walks in and promptly reminds her daughter to stop believing in those fantasies. She explains that women like her and Natalie, both curvy, never get the perfect ending; they are reduced to being either a one-night fling or a mistress, at best. Despite her mother’s jaded attitude, young Natalie believes that she can have the perfect romance.
Twenty-five years later, Natalie (Rebel Wilson) is working in New York as a low-level architect for a small firm. She is often dismissed by her colleagues and clients who treat her with little respect. However, she has two friends she can count on: Whitney (Betty Gilpin), her assistant and Josh (Adam Devine) a fellow architect; Natalie is oblivious to the fact that Blake is attracted to her. Natalie has become jaded and has given up her hopes of finding true love.
One day, on her way home from a business meeting, she is mugged in the subway. She fights off her attacker, but hits her head on a pole in the process, which causes her to black out. When she awakes, she finds herself in a luxurious hospital room and with an attractive male doctor tending to her wounds. When she leaves the hospital, dressed in couture, as her clothes were destroyed, she finds herself in a fantasy version of New York, where everything is perfect. There are no polluted smells like the ones to which she has become accustomed. Instead, everywhere she turns is filled with fresh smelling flowers. She also notices the rapidity in which people become smitten with each other.
Natalie encounters Blake, a client of the firm she works at, who becomes immediately smitten by her. He takes Natalie to her apartment where she discovers she lives in a luxurious suite with everything she has ever dreamed of owning. When she is in distress, her friend Donny (Brandon Scott Jones), a homosexual, suddenly appears to give her advice. This is in reference to the cliché that a Gay man is in a romcom to play the part of the best friend and confidant.
When she returns to work, Natalie is horrified to discover that her best friend Whitney is now her archnemesis. Overwhelmed, she finds Josh who has remained the same, except when he becomes suddenly smitten and quickly begins courting Isabella (Priyanka Chopra), a yoga ambassador.
During a trip to the Hamptons with Blake, who she is now dating, Josh and Isabella announce that they are getting married. Natalie realizes in that moment that Josh is her happily-ever-after. She tries to reason with Josh, but he tells her he tried to show his interest in her, but she always blew him off. He insists that it is time for him to move on.
A heart-broken Natalie decides to return to New York. Her friend Donny (Brandon Scott Jones) shows up and convinces her not to give up on Josh. She decides to stop the wedding. In the process of declaring her feelings to him, she realizes that she does not need a man to complete her; she is enough. She leaves the church accepting Josh’s choice to marry Isabella.
Today, it is easy for one to become confused between a healthy self -image and a distorted one due to societies standards of the perfect person. Natalie is a smart and attractive woman, she is overlooked because of her weight. In the real world, she is dismissed by Blake, her crush because of her physical features and general demeanor. However, in the fantasy world, Blake is smitten by her. This makes Natalie uncomfortable because she has become accustom to the negativity surrounding her physical appearance.
“So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.” —Genesis 1:27
Natalie spends more time trying to be invisible, while her friend Whitney points out that “people would have an easier time if you were more open.” However, along her journey, in the fantasy version of New York, she comes to realize that she is enough, that her inner beauty has value, and that she is worth loving.
As Christians, it is important to build a healthy self-esteem in Christ. We should never keep our eyes focus on what the world deems as attractive, but instead focus on what God deems as attractive—one’s obedience to Him.
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” —Jeremiah 29:11
God is the ultimate matchmaker. For those who are single, there is nothing wrong with asking God for a man. Cheryl Martin, author of the book 1st Class Single, cautions Christians that it is okay to ask for favor with someone one might be attracted to, but once that request is voiced, let God do his work. “If you are trusting Him to bring you the right person at the right time, you can ask for favor.” In the meantime, do not manipulate the situation; God knows exactly what we need.
In fantasy New York, when Blake has told her he is moving on with Isabella, Natalie tries to manipulate the situation by suddenly participating in the things he wants to do, such as participating in karaoke. However, in real New York, she realizes that Blake saw her for who she is the whole time.
“As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.” —Proverbs 27:17
Viewers should be aware that vulgarity and other issues strongly diminish this film.
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.
We live in a culture of self love, to put it simply, a culture that is consumed with self love, ego building, self esteem, feeling good about yourself, thinking you’re important, thinking you’re valuable, thinking you’re a hero, thinking you’ve achieved something, thinking you’re worthy of honor. We’re drowning in awards for everything imaginable and unimaginable. Parents are consumed with boosting the egos of their children with every imaginable means, as well as boosting their own sense of self value. This is the generation of self lovers.
And just by way of reminder, in 2 Timothy chapter 3 the apostle Paul classified “love of self” as a sin—in fact, a dominating sin. In one of his familiar lists of iniquities—there are numbers of them in his letters—he begins the list of iniquities in 2 Timothy chapter 3 with “lovers of self,” and then “lovers of money,” and then goes through the rest of his list. This describes deceivers, unbelievers, those outside the kingdom of God, those who do not know the truth. Self love is at the top of the list in terms of normal human attitude. Sinners are consumed with pride. They’re consumed with themselves. We have made that into the prominent, dominant virtue in our society.
PLEASE share your observations and insights to be posted here.
The thing that bothered me the most was the climactic message of the film: “I don’t need a guy to love me; all I need is for ME to love me.” On one hand, this dispenses with the typical rom-com conclusion of a girl needing a man to “complete her;” a trope that is inaccurate and downright harmful if girls believe it. But the swing to radical self-love and self-acceptance as the answer? That may be worse. It turns the individual into a self-fulfilling center of their own universe; complete without any need for anyone else. While this idea fits right in with the current milieu, it isn’t one we should embrace. The shift from worshiping another individual to worshiping yourself is not positive; it’s still disordered and still in need of correction by God’s grace.
My Ratings: Moral rating: Very Offensive / Moviemaking quality: 3