SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE alum Chris Rock writes, directs, and stars in I THINK I LOVE MY WIFE. Rock's film is a remake of the 1972 Eric Rohmer film, CHLOE IN THE AFTERNOON, which explores a married man's common struggle with extramarital temptations. Richard Cooper (Rock) has it all: a beautiful wife, Brenda (Gina Torres); adorable kids; a successful investment banking career--and complete boredom! He has become obsessed with other women, and a visit from an old friend's former flame, sexy and flirtatious Nikki (Kerry Washington), has him staring the possibility of infidelity in the face. Nikki pursues a friendship that provides Richard some much-needed excitement, but also lands him in all kinds of trouble. He jeopardizes his reputation at work, causes fights at home, and rapidly loses sight of what he has built his life around. At some point he must choose between his affair-fantasy and remaining the faithful husband and father he's always been.
I THINK I LOVE MY WIFE provides an entertaining and at times thought-provoking modern version of a classic tale, injecting lighthearted humor into a sensitive and all-too-familiar subject that plagues the marriage culture. Rock perfectly channels the suburban, career-climbing family man, while Torres and Washington are convincing as the angel versus devil on his shoulders.
Rating: R (MPAA) Rating Reason: for pervasive language and some sexual content. Runtime: 94 minutes DVD Code: Region 1 US, CA Genre: Comedies Color: Color Dual Side Rating: DVD Features:
Keep Case
Dual Side
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 - Spanish, French
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentaries - Chris Rock - Director/Star/Writer
Disc 1/Side A: I THINK I LOVE MY WIFE - Full Frame
Full Frame - 1.31
Additional Release Material:
Alternate Scenes - Deleted Scenes
Outtakes - Outtakes and Bloopers
Disc 1/Side B: I THINK I LOVE MY WIFE - Widescreen
Widescreen - 1.85
Additional Release Material:
Additional Footage - FX Movie Channel Premiere
Behind the Scenes - 1. "I Think I Love Making This Movie"
2. FX Movie Channel Casting Session
Featurette - "What's a Man to Do"
Music Videos - The Brand New Heavies - "I Don't Know Why (I Love You)"
Trailers
Chris Rock, Steve Buscemi, Gina Torres, Edward Herrman, Eliza Coupe, Cassandra Freeman, Adam Scher, Kerry Washington, Samantha Ivers
Chris Rock
"Mr. Rock has not only done his best work as a director and screenwriter but has also made an unusually insightful and funny mainstream American movie about the predicaments of modern marriage." New York Times (03/22/2007) SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE alum Chris Rock writes, directs, and stars in I THINK I LOVE MY WIFE. Rock's film is a remake of the 1972 Eric Rohmer film, CHLOE IN THE AFTERNOON, which explores a married man's common struggle with extramarital temptations. Richard Cooper (Rock) has it all: a beautiful wife, Brenda (Gina Torres); adorable kids; a successful investment banking career--and complete boredom! He has become obsessed with other women, and a visit from an old friend's former flame, sexy and flirtatious Nikki (Kerry Washington), has him staring the possibility of infidelity in the face. Nikki pursues a friendship that provides Richard some much-needed excitement, but also lands him in all kinds of trouble. He jeopardizes his reputation at work, causes fights at home, and rapidly loses sight of what he has built his life around. At some point he must choose between his affair-fantasy and remaining the faithful husband and father he's always been.
I THINK I LOVE MY WIFE provides an entertaining and at times thought-provoking modern version of a classic tale, injecting lighthearted humor into a sensitive and all-too-familiar subject that plagues the marriage culture. Rock perfectly channels the suburban, career-climbing family man, while Torres and Washington are convincing as the angel versus devil on his shoulders. () "Rock's second stint behind the camera results in a sophisticated look at the tedium of an old marriage and the temptation of a new love that marks a maturing of his humor without any attendant dulling of his cutting-edge causticity." Box Office (04/01/2007) Theatrical Release: March 16, 2007 () |