New in Town

Renée Zellweger  Actor Harry Connick, Jr.  Actor J.K. Simmons  Actor Frances Conroy  Actor Siobhan Fallon-Hogan  Actor

PG

MPAA Rating: PG
Contains:Adult Humor,Mild Language

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New in Town

Theatrical Release Date: 2008 (USA) / 2009 01 30 (USA)

UPC: 031398109860

Studio: Lionsgate

MPAA Rating: PG   Contains:[Adult Humor, Mild Language]

Summary: Ren?e Zellweger and Harry Connick Jr. headline this romantic comedy about an ambitious Miami executive who meets the man of her dreams and begins reassessing her big-city values after accepting a temporary transfer to the middle of nowhere. When it comes to climbing the corporate latter, Lucy Hill (Zellweger) is a good few rungs above her closest competitor; she's got ambition to spare, and she cares more about driving the latest model car and filling her closet with shoes than making friends around the office. Offered a temporary assignment restructuring a manufacturing plant in the snowbound town of New Ulm, Lucy accepts, knowing that a big promotion is just around the corner. But New Ulm and Miami couldn't be more different if they were each located on separate continents, and as Lucy warms to the locals she discovers that there's more to life than making top dollar and wearing the latest fashions. When handsome local Ted Mitchell (Harry Connick Jr.) takes an interest in Lucy, it isn't long before the whole town is abuzz with rumors of romance, and the girl from the city discovers that a bit of rural magic could work wonders for her outlook on life. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Category: Comedy

Features: cc

New in Town

Format: DVD

Release Date: 05/26/2009

Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Alternate Wide Screen

Audio: DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo, DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DD-EX Dolby Digital Surround EX (simulated 6.1)

Runtime: 97 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English

Subtitles: English,Spanish

Region: USA & territories, Canada

Chapters: Disc #1 -- New in Town
1. It's Not Gossip [:00]
2. I Can Do It [:00]
3. "Are You a Scrapper?" [:00]
4. Company [:00]
5. Dinner Table [:00]
6. New Phase [:00]
7. Truck Guy [3:31]
8. Happy Gopher Day [3:18]
9. Double Shots [4:28]
10. Snow Trouble [3:34]
11. Rescued [3:35]
12. Merry Christmas to You [4:03]
13. Clearing the Air [3:16]
14. A Woman's Help [2:30]
15. Valentine's Date [4:32]
16. Something Dirty [6:00]
17. Lead Story [2:19]
18. Bad News [4:48]
19. On Your Own [2:52]
20. It Matters [2:09]
21. Making Progress [7:03]
22. Saying Goodbye [5:44]
23. Making Deals [2:02]
24. Business as Usual [2:05]

Jason Buchanan

A romantic comedy just as benign and generic as its instantly forgettable title suggests, New in Town may be a simplistic reworking of rom-com script number 42B, yet much like Blanche Gunderson's "nothing fancy" meatloaf, it has a certain Midwestern charm that settles calmly in the stomach, making the viewer feel warm, comfortable, and quick to smile. Lucy Hill (Ren?e Zellweger) is a Miami executive on the fast track to becoming CEO of a powerful business firm. Presented with the opportunity to restructure a manufacturing plant in New Ulm, MN, Lucy catches the next flight out of Miami and prepares to prove herself in the field. At first she's all business, determined to remain professional, do her job, and get back to Miami as quickly as possible. But things work differently in Minnesota than they do in Miami, and though her initial approach to dealing with new secretary Blanche Gunderson (Siobhan Fallon), union rep Ted Mitchell (Harry Connick Jr.), and gruff factory foreman Stu Kopenhafer (J.K. Simmons) is decidedly cool, a little time -- and a few servings of Blanche's top-secret-recipe tapioca -- help her to realize that in the snowy Midwest, a warmer modus operandi can work wonders. Just as Lucy begins growing closer to Ted, however, she learns that the reconfiguration has failed and that the company plans to close the factory down. Will the woman who was once all business simply cut her losses and move on to the next opportunity, or can she find another product for the factory to produce and keep the hardworking people of New Ulm gainfully employed at the same time? If the answer to that last question isn't glaringly obvious, you're sure to get a kick out of New in Town. Conversely, if you guessed the answer correctly but still have a soft spot for predictable romantic comedies, you'll likely be forgiving enough to let this well-played yet wholly unoriginal charmer work its watery magic on you. Aside from one particularly messy tapioca fight, there may not be one original idea in New in Town. From the gag where the big-city girl strolls into a Midwestern snowstorm wearing high heels to the confrontation she has with a small-town waitress (named Flo, natch), and the happy denouement where the crusty factory foreman pretends to have something in his eye rather than showing an actual shred of emotion, every joke in New in Town feels as if it may have been written decades ago. Yet despite the sinking feeling that we've seen these scenes played out by Hollywood time and again, New in Town still manages to coast far enough on goofy sentiment, fun performances, and good old Middle American virtue to make it virtually cynic-proof. No one is likely to walk out of New in Town feeling like they've been blindsided by anything even remotely inappropriate, offensive, or objectionable, and in a time when comedy seems to be based more on irony and shock value than gentle laughs, New in Town stands apart from the pack as the kind of comfort-food cinema that one would expect to find on the living room television of a snowbound Minnesota family when the weather outside is too treacherous too endure. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Cast and Crew: Ferron Guerreiro  Actor 
James Durham  Actor 
Paul Brooks  Producer 
Jonas Elmer  Director 
Tracey E. Edmonds  Producer 
Peter Safran  Producer 
Darryl Taja  Producer 
Norm Waitt  Executive Producer 
C. Jay Cox  Screenwriter 
Scott Niemeyer  Executive Producer 
John Swihart  Composer (Music Score) 
Ken Rance  Screenwriter 
Renée Zellweger  Actor 
Harry Connick, Jr.  Actor 
J.K. Simmons  Actor 
Frances Conroy  Actor 
Siobhan Fallon-Hogan  Actor 

Country: USA