http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/film-reviews/couples-retreat-film-review-1004020287.story

Couples Retreat - Film  Review

Bottom Line: This intermittently funny tale of four couples undergoing 
relationship therapy struggles hard for its occasional laughs.
A good idea for a sophisticated comedy lurks within the latest Jon 
Favreau-Vince Vaughn collaboration, "Couples Retreat," but the filmmakers lack 
the courage of their convictions. So the payoff is mixed at best. The problem 
might lie in that word "sophisticated." The current trends in film comedies are 
raunch and juvenilia, the very antithesis of sophistication.

When Favreau and Vaughn came to everyone's attention more than a dozen years 
ago with "Swingers," they seemed to have the knack for making a guy movie that 
was both hip and empathetic about men's sexual insecurities. But the two don't 
quite reclaim that territory in "Retreat," which could very well be a follow-up 
to that tale of randy twentysomething males about town, now married and 
experiencing varying degrees of marital stress.

Boxoffice potential is difficult to judge. Normally, a film involving either or 
both actors-writers-producers and (in Favreau's case) a director has strong 
commercial appeal. But the marital issues raised might puzzle or distract 
younger fans expecting sexual tease and potty humor.

In fact, Favreau and Vaughn suffer from the same distraction. There is sexual 
tease and potty humor here, the latter involving Vaughn's young son, and it's 
very funny. The sex stuff works less well and feels out of place among married 
people trying to work through legitimate issues couples face in real life. So 
the script the two wrote with fellow comedy writer Dana Fox gets pulled in 
opposite directions.

The idea is to send four couples off to an island paradise that serves as a 
retreat for couples experiencing relationship woes. One couple (Jason Bateman 
and Kristen Bell) is contemplating divorce.

The anchor couple, Vaughn and Malin Akerman, is a well-adjusted pair with kids, 
friends and busy lives. Another couple, Favreau and Kristin Davis, are more 
dysfunctional than they might realize, and the fourth "couple" barely qualifies 
as such. Faizon Love is newly divorced and has agreed to go along with his 
20-year-old girlfriend, Kali Hawk, whom he has just met.

The other three couples have come along as a favor to Bateman and Bell because 
this gives them a cut-rate deal at the island resort (shot in French 
Polynesia). But the imperious couples guru (Jean Reno) insists that everyone 
must participate or they can all leave with refunds. Predictably, once the 
shrinks and relationship experts go to work, no one's marriage is safe.

The best sections of the film deal with Vaughn and Akerman since it represents 
a critique of the relationship industry that is determined to justify its 
existence in finding problems even if none exists. The most problematic in 
comedic terms involves Favreau and Davis. No week at a couples retreat is going 
to solve their myriad problems.

Because the movie can't get stalled in therapy sessions, it does venture into 
the island for forced situation comedy involving a shark attack, an unlikely 
yoga session and a body massage where mixed signals result in an embarrassing 
male arousal. The real problem, though, is that the movie can't decide how 
seriously it wants to take its characters and their conflicts.

Producer-turned-director Peter Billingsley wisely turns the movie over to his 
talented cast. He and the writers can be faulted, however, for emphasizing the 
male characters over the women even if the title alone would seem to dictate 
more even-handed portrayals.

Tech credits are solid, with the film repping the American debut of Indian 
superstar film composer A. R. Rahman. His is an efficient though relatively 
unmemorable job, the only hint of his Indian roots coming in the almost 
superfluous sequences involving Reno's "couples whisperer."


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