She's the One
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEdward Burns
Written byEdward Burns
Produced byEdward Burns
Ted Hope
James Schamus
Starring
CinematographyFrank Prinzi
Edited bySusan Graef
Music byTom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Production
companies
Fox Searchlight Pictures
Good Machine
Marlboro Road Gang Productions
South Fork Pictures
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • August 23, 1996 (1996-08-23)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$3 million[1]
Box office$13.8 million

She's the One is a 1996 American romantic comedy film written and directed by New York actor and director Edward Burns. It stars Jennifer Aniston and Cameron Diaz. The film features one of Tom Petty's few movie soundtracks, and is named after the Bruce Springsteen song of the same name.

Plot

Irish Catholic Mickey Fitzpatrick is a NYC taxi driver, unhappy over his ex-fiancée Heather's infidelity. His brother, Francis, is a Wall Street stock investor married to Renee, though she is frustrated by his lack of desire for sexual relations not knowing he is having an affair with Heather.

On weekends, Mickey and Francis visit their parents on Long Island. Their father, Frank, is old-school, low-key and sexist, always telling Mickey and Francis what to do, yet also advising them to always push to succeed.

Driving his cab, Mickey picks up Hope, an NYU art student headed to the airport. Clicking immediately, she asks him to drive her to New Orleans, they fall head over heels and impulsively marry the next day, returning to NYC two days later to tell Francis and Renee. Francis is upset, mostly because he was not asked to be best man.

Mickey moves in with Hope, but soon becomes disillusioned with her bohemian lifestyle, including frequent power cuts in their ramshackle apartment. Francis grows concerned that he is being unfair to Heather by continuing to stay with Renee. At the same time, Renee's Italian-American family, mostly her younger sister Molly, suggest the problem with Francis' lack of interest is that he may be gay, so she asks Mickey and Frank to confront him. He denies being gay, but admits to being unfaithful.

Francis belittles Mickey for the lack of forward progress in his life with Hope. Francis also argues with Heather about her ongoing sexual relations with wealthy old man, "Papa". When Mickey picks up Heather as a fare, he goes up to her apartment to retrieve his TV. She implies that he wants more than just the TV from her, but he does not reciprocate, chastising her for the infidelity that ended their engagement and for her time as a call girl to pay her way through college. Throughout it all, Frank offers more egotistical advice to themonly to be devastated when he learns, on a fishing trip with his priest, that his religious wife has not been to Mass in months.

On a visit to Heather's, Francis learns about her meeting with Mickey. He shows up at his brother's to ask him if he had sex with her. Later, Mickey discovers she is who Francis is having the affair with. The revelation escalates to an argument at their parents', leading Frank to strap boxing gloves on them, with Mickey winning on the first punch.

Francis finally tells Renee about his affair and files for divorce. When Mickey finds out he intends to marry Heather, he tells Francis Heather had been a prostitute, giving Francis cold feet.

Hope informs Mickey they will need to move to Paris in a month if she is accepted into art school there. Already unsure of leaving New York to join her when meeting Connie, Hope's co-worker at a neighborhood bar, who claims to have had a "special relationship" with Hope before the marriage (strongly implying a lesbian romance). Mickey reacts poorly, leading Hope to say she is unsure if he should come to Paris with her after all.

Due to Francis' sudden indecision over marriage, Heather marries Papa. When he threatens to tell Papa that she was a prostitute, Heather tells him that Papa was "her best customer". He then calls Renee in hopes of getting back together with her, but she is already in a relationship with Scott Sherman, a family acquaintance whom Francis previously called a fatso geek, while Renee had pointed out that he was shy and sweet and nicer than him.

Mickey and Francis meet with Frank at his house, and he tells them their mother just left him for a hardware store owner. She has been sleeping with him when supposedly at church. Frank apologizes to his sons for giving them bad advice about life and love, as his own wife was cheating. The three men go out fishing, aware that despite the failure of their love lives, they will always have each other. As they prepare the motorboat to cast off, Mickey realizes he must try to talk with Hope before she leaves for Paris. Surprised, he learns Frank has arranged a special guest Hope. She asks to drive the boat, but Frank, who never allowed a woman on his boat before, says it is too soon for that.

Cast

Reception

Critical reception of the film was mixed. Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 62% based on reviews from 52 critics, with an average rating of 5.9/10. The consensus states: "A relationship comedy that errs on the side of slick, She's the One is a perfunctory study of machismo from a very male perspective."[2] Critics were, overall, won by the performances of John Mahoney, Jennifer Aniston and Cameron Diaz: Aniston and Mahoney brought a "kind of solid professionalism" according to Janet Maslin and Lisa Schwarzbaum.[3][4] Chris Hicks said, "Better, however, are Diaz, lending charm to a character who could have been quite unsympathetic, and especially Aniston, whose decent, trusting character is quite appealing. Best of all, however, is John Mahoney, hilarious as the bombastic patriarch of the Fitzpatrick clan, who refers to his sons as 'sisters' and calls them 'Barbara' or 'Dorothy' while offering ill-advised sarcasm in place of fatherly wisdom."[5] For Louise Keller, "Burns, Diaz, Bahns and Aniston inject an energy and charisma of their own, and they're fun to watch." Paul Fischer found that Diaz and Aniston are "both in fine form".[6] Alison Macor said, "As Francis' wife Renee, Aniston provides one of the few bright spots in She's the One. Playing Renee as the wry voice of sanity among the rest of the characters, Aniston shows that she's the one who makes this film somewhat enjoyable."

Critics were less forgiving of Maxine Bahns. Mick LaSalle said about her, "The graduate student, Hope, is played by Maxine Bahns, Burns' real-life girlfriend, who was also his love interest in McMullen. Throw a rock out the window, and it's sure to hit someone with more acting talent than Bahns. She can't say a line without it ringing false and keeps smiling nervously, like a shy person at a party. In a way, it's rather sweet that Burns keeps casting Bahns. But She's the One would have been much improved had Burns given Jennifer Aniston the Bahns role. Instead Aniston is wasted here as the unloved wife of Mickey's callous brother, Francis (Mike McGlone of McMullen). She looks great, but all she gets to do is whine and smoke, and she all, but disappears two-thirds of the way into the film."[7]

Awards and nominations

Year Association Category Nominee Results
1996 Deauville American Film Festival Grand Special Prize award Edward Burns Nominated
1997 Golden Raspberry Awards Worst New Star Jennifer Aniston Nominated
Satellite Awards Best Original Song "Walls" Tom Petty Nominated

Soundtrack

Songs and Music from She's the One
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedAugust 6, 1996
Recorded1992-96
StudioSound City, Village Recorders and Andora Studios
GenreRock
Length51:57
LabelWarner Bros. Records
ProducerRick Rubin, Tom Petty, Mike Campbell
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers chronology
Wildflowers
(1994)
Songs and Music from She's the One
(1996)
Echo
(1999)
Singles from Songs and Music from "She's the One"
  1. "Walls (Circus)"
    Released: July 29, 1996

All tracks are written by Tom Petty, except where noted

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Walls (Circus)" 4:25
2."Grew Up Fast" 5:09
3."Zero from Outer Space" 3:08
4."Climb That Hill"Petty, Mike Campbell3:57
5."Change the Locks"Lucinda Williams4:56
6."Angel Dream (No. 4)" 2:27
7."Hope You Never" 3:02
8."Asshole"Beck Hansen3:11
9."Supernatural Radio" 5:22
10."California" 2:39
11."Hope on Board" 1:18
12."Walls (No. 3)" 3:03
13."Angel Dream (No. 2)" 2:27
14."Hung Up and Overdue" 5:48
15."Airport" 0:57
Total length:51:57

Personnel

Home video

In 2000, Fox Home Entertainment released "Stories From Long Island: Three Films by Edward Burns" ($70), a DVD set which included The Brothers McMullen (1995), She's the One and No Looking Back (1998).[8]

References

  1. Macauley, Scott (18 March 2011). "Breaking Down Ed Burns' $9000 Budget". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
  2. "She's the One". rottentomatoes.com. 23 August 1996.
  3. Maslin, Janet (August 23, 1996). "She s The One (1996) : A 2d Movie Is a Reprise Of a Debut, With Cash". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-07-12.
  4. "She's the One – EW.com". Entertainment Weekly's EW.com.
  5. Hicks, Chris (13 September 1996). "Film review: She's the One". DeseretNews.com.
  6. "Urban Cinefile SHE'S THE ONE". urbancinefile.com.au.
  7. "FILM REVIEW -- She's Still 'the One' / 'McMullen' director makes first film again". SFGate.
  8. Hartl, John (October 13, 2000). "DVDs moving in on home-video market". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
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