You, Me & Tuscany
"She came for the pasta and got lost in the sauce."
When a woman crashes at an empty Italian villa, posing as the owner's fiancée, she discovers an unexpected romance that could transform her life.
"She came for the pasta and got lost in the sauce."
When a woman crashes at an empty Italian villa, posing as the owner's fiancée, she discovers an unexpected romance that could transform her life.
Halle Bailey
Anna
Regé-Jean Page
Michael
Marco Calvani
Lorenzo
Lorenzo de Moor
Matteo
Aziza Scott
Claire
Nia Vardalos
Mrs. Dunn
Isabella Ferrari
Gabriella
Emanuele Pacca
Giuseppe
Stefania Casini
Nonna Alessia
When a woman crashes at an empty Italian villa, posing as the owner's fiancée, she discovers an unexpected romance that could transform her life.
They say that “imitation is the highest form of flattery,” but, when that sincere admiration begins teetering on the brink of becoming derivative, much of the magic and charm is lost. And that, for what it’s worth, is the downfall of this much-anticipated romantic comedy from director Kat Coiro, a filmmaker best known for her short subjects, music videos and TV work. Anna (Halle Bailey) is a twenty-something wannabe chef who’s been treading water as a New York City house sitter ever since the untimely death of her culinary inspiration, her mother. Grief aside, she nevertheless seriously needs to get her life back on track, specifically by living the life that she truly wants for herself. However, as someone who’s loath to take responsibility for herself, she wallows in an ever-deepening pool of financial trouble, bad decisions and lack of direction. But a chance meeting in a hotel bar with a handsome, wealthy, globe-trotting Italian real estate mogul, Matteo (Lorenzo de Moor), launches her into an impromptu adventure with romantic potential, prompting her to spontaneously visit his elegant though unoccupied Tuscan villa (albeit uninvited, too – another of those potential bad decisions). Anna sees the trip as a catalyst for changing her life, but she soon gets more than what she bargained for when she’s forced to come up with a cover story for why she has suddenly taken over Matteo’s home, a question for his skeptical family members who care for the villa in his absence. Her explanation? She’s Matteo’s fiancée, an announcement that gets her welcomed with open arms (all unbeknownst to her alleged beau). In the meantime, however, Anna meets and begins falling for Matteo’s adopted brother, Micheal (Regé-Jean Page), a hunky, well-to-do Tuscan vineyard owner, an attraction that proves mutual. But how does she explain herself now as the sparks begin to fly between her and her fiancé’s sibling? Such is the premise for what follows, all set against the lush Tuscan landscape, a lively small town summer festival and life with the brothers’ comically colorful relatives (arguably the film’s strongest attribute). The fundamental problem here, though, is that the narrative isn’t especially original, drawing from storylines previously explored in other Italian romcoms like “Moonstruck” (1987) and “Under the Tuscan Sun” (2003), both of which told their tales much more effectively, making this offering appear pale by comparison. What’s more, “You, Me & Tuscany” isn’t terribly funny, either, a key component that shouldn’t be lacking in a romantic comedy. In fact, rarely does hilarity ensue. Ultimately, this release comes across more like something one would find on Lifetime, We TV or The Hallmark Channel – passable but essentially lightweight fare that’s not particularly fresh, innovative or overly engaging. In some ways, I suppose I shouldn’t have expected more than this, but it also seems like the creators of this project could have made more of an effort to come up with something a little less predictable, formulaic, sappy, and, at times, fundamentally implausible. Some have called this an ideal date night movie, but, to me, its inability to draw viewers into the story more successfully strikes me as being more like something to watch when one is at home on a Friday night stretched out on the couch in a pair of sweats with a box of bonbons with nothing better to do, the perfect background noise movie, a romcom about which there’s not a whole lot to love.
Anyone recall 'Made in Italy' (2020)? This has a similar vibe to it as it showcases the beauty of traditional rural Italian life as a backdrop to a quirkier than usual romance. 'Anna' (Halle Bailey) was an aspiring chef until her mother died from cancer and now she has rather lost her way (and her job and flat). Her best friend has been urging her to use her plane ticket to Italy but she has resisted until a chance hotel encounter with 'Matteo' (Lorenzo de Moor) in an hotel bar. He tells her enough about himself and his vineyard in Tuscany to inspire her to take the trip. She arrives in a beautiful small town just as it's summer festival is about to happen, so she can't get an hotel room. Indeed, thanks to 'Michael' (Regé-Jean Page) she can't even get the last sandwich in the place! She does recall that 'Matteo' has a empty villa nearby, though, and so decides that no harm can come from crashing there for the night. Thing is, she is a bit of a nosey parker in other people's homes, and so when she is unexpectedly discovered by his mother and his gradmother next morning, wearing a diamond ring she found in a drawer, they jump to the wrong conclusion and she does little to contradict them. With wrong ends of the stick being taken all over the shop, 'Anna' discovers that the aforementioned sandwich-stealer just happens to be their adopted son and that he looks very good in (or out of) wet linen. We already know that 'Matteo' is estranged from his family, so when he does turn up furious that she has been playing his family like a fiddle, he determines that the truth should out. Is that in his best interest, though? Or her's? Or anyone else's? Everything about this film is designed to be easy on the eye and lightly flirtatious and on those fronts it is hard to dislike any of it. The characters are more tartare than well done; there are a lot of lingering shots of Page, the scenery, Page and more scenery, of Page and... you get the drift. It's harmless, with an hint of comedy, but I doubt that you will ever remember it.
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