'Save the Date' feels like a quiet story about two sisters and the men in their lives, kind of reminiscent of the quieter rom-coms of the 1990s; it's very character-driven and not as wedding-focused.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I've been reading 'The Sisterhood,' and I love the author Bobbie Houston and what she's about. It's the whole idea of women celebrating each other's wins and journeying through life together.
The blind date that has stood you up: your life.
I think that weddings have probably been crashed since the beginning of time. Cavemen crashed them. You go to meet girls. It makes sense.
Couples that do save have stronger, more stable, less stressful unions. In other words, you don't want to be fighting about saving; you just want to be saving, period.
But John Landis wrote a good relationship which is really what the film's about. A very straightforward young woman who's very sure of herself and she meets a young man who needs some taking care of.
That first writing session, what Dan Hill calls a creative blind date, is always a real challenge, and you bring that back to your partner when you return to writing with them.
You know there's some great folks, great story telling at 'Dateline,' and I'm glad to be a part of it.
I doubt anyone in Hollywood has had more 'dates' than me.
The perfect date is the one where anything and everything goes wrong, but at the end of it, all you want is to see them again.
I just wrapped this movie called 'The Wedding Crashers' which was a pretty big break for me.
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