Will enthral pre-teen chippies with its wholesome, marshmallow-peep-sweet vacuous-ness.
How to Deal (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:91
Fresh:26
Rotten:65
Average Rating:4.5/10
Consensus: Soap opera for teens.
Runtime: 1 hr 42 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Sometimes life gets turned upside down. And maybe that’s why it’s so hard to believe that anyone, especially 17 year-old Halley Martin (Mandy Moore), could actually experience that thing called... Sometimes life gets turned upside down. And maybe that’s why it’s so hard to believe that anyone, especially 17 year-old Halley Martin (Mandy Moore), could actually experience that thing called love. The people closest to Halley are in the midst of major upheavals in their love lives. Her mother, Lydia (Allison Janney), is embittered by her recently finalized divorce. Her sister, Ashley (Mary Catherine Garrison), is marrying a guy with whom she is constantly fighting. Her best friend, Scarlett (Alexandra Holden), can’t keep her hands off of her first serious boyfriend. Most distressingly for Halley, her father, Len (Peter Gallagher), who is a DJ at a local radio station, combats his midlife crisis with a stereotypically boyish elopement to the station’s much-younger traffic reporter. So how’s Halley supposed to deal? She isn’t about to let herself succumb to the pipe dream of storybook romance, and Macon Forrester (Trent Ford) is the one guy who challenges her idea that love just complicates a perfectly good friendship. As Halley’s life grows more and more complicated, she finds a friend in Macon, but when she feels herself falling for him, will Halley move beyond her fears and disappointments to experience real love? A humorous and poignant look at teen romance, How to Deal stars Mandy Moore (A Walk to Remember) as the independent and spirited Halley Martin. Allison Janney (American Beauty, NBC’s “The West Wing”) plays Halley’s mother Lydia and Peter Gallagher (Mr. Deeds, CBS’ “Cupid & Cate”) plays her father Len. The ensemble cast also includes Trent Ford, Alexandra Holden, Dylan Baker, Nina Foch, Mackenzie Astin, Connie Ray, Mary Catherine Garrison and Sonja Smits. Clare Kilner (Janice Beard: 45 wpm) directs from a screenplay by Neena Beber, based on two novels, Someone Like You and That Summer, by Sarah Dessen. William Teitler and Erica Huggins produce. Ted Field, Chris Van Allsburg, Scott Kroopf and David Linde, as well as Toby Emmerich and Michele Weiss, serve as executive producers. The co-producer is Stephanie Striegel. Production designer Dan Davis, director of photography Eric Edwards, costume designer Alexandra Welker and editor Janice Hampton, A.C.E., complete the creative team. Capitol Records will release the soundtrack, featuring an eclectic mix of artists that includes Skye Sweetnam, Beth Orton, Liz Phair, The Flaming Lips and Cat Stevens, on July 8th, 2003. New Line Cinema will release How To Deal (rated PG-13 by the M.P.A.A for “sexual content, drug material, language and some thematic elements”) nationwide on July 18th, 2003. [More]
Starring: Mandy Moore, Trent Ford, Allison Janney, Alexandra Holden
Starring: Mandy Moore, Trent Ford, Allison Janney, Alexandra Holden, Mackenzie Astin, Peter Gallagher, Nina Foch, Connie Ray, Dylan Baker
Director: Clare Kilner
Director: Clare Kilner
Producer: Erica Huggins, William Teitler
Composer: David Kitay
Studio: New Line Cinema
Reviews for How to Deal
There's one way to deal with Mandy Moore's new drama, How to Deal: Don't.
Despite its humorous touches, Deal overindulges an appealing gentleness to become increasingly cloying.
The movie betrays the books, as director Clare Kilner and writer Neena Beber throw together a generalized hodgepodge of events.
It's too heavy on issues and too light on just observing the characters and enjoying their freshness.
There's not much insight into what really makes teens tick, and that's what keeps How to Deal from being the supportive, compassionate yarn it tries so hard to be.
Mandy Moore continues to display a surprising amount of talent (if not range) in her acting ability.
Any melodrama that introduces both teen pregnancy and a 17-year-old's funeral within the first act would seem to have nowhere to go but up, yet this joyless exercise just wallows in empty navel-gazing.
In delivering its message of teen perseverence, How to Deal piles on "issues" without finding a reasonable connective narrative.
Whoever taught Mandy how to deal should have advised her to fold while she had the chance.
After a summer filled with robots, explosions, car crashes, fart jokes and lazy-eyed skanks battling Demi Moore, here is a simple, unassuming film that actually dares to include the human element into the mix.
Require[s] only the presence of Scott Baio to qualify as fodder for an after-school special.
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