![: Bewitched [2005]](http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/P/B000B7QNEY.02._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg)
Amazon.co.uk Review:
As one of many in the ongoing trend of resurrecting old
TV shows and turning them into contemporary Hollywood
product, Bewitched tries awfully hard to
distinguish itself. It succeeds in lots of surprising
ways, not least of which is the star power brought by
Nicole Kidman and Will Ferrell. Even if they don't create
the kind of romantic chemistry that would have elevated
the already high concept, they act as delightful foils to
each other, but more often to themselves. The conceit of
this Bewitched is that it's a self-reflexive
look at the entertainment business, with Ferrell playing
Jack Wyatt, an actor starring in an updated version of
the classic TV show. Out of favour with the Hollywood
elite and desperately in need of a hit, he insists on an
unknown to play Samantha, as he wants the show to be
about him, since if something doesn't come his
way soon, he's going to be hearing a lot of no's, despite
the yes-men surrounding him. While his agent gets him the
"unknown Samantha" deal, it's Jack himself who
discovers his own leading lady in the delightful figure
of Isabel Bigalow, who possesses just the right nose
wiggle, not to mention other wiggles.
But wouldn't you know it, Isabel really is a
witch, and exactly the kind of "good" witch
trying to rely less on her magical powers that Samantha
Stevens was back in her "real" world. Instead
of a cranky mother like Endora, Isabel has a
distinguished father, Nigel who lurks around her as a
constant reminder that she can't be who she's not, and
she certainly can't be the star of some zany TV show. As
the plot thickens and the movie's reflexivity grows more
convoluted, Nigel falls for the non-witch actress who
plays Endora, and Jack and Isabel fall for each other.
Here's where the Ferrell/Kidman gel doesnt quite
become aspic, but her perkiness and his goofiness are
more than enough to make the entirety of the proceedings
a delectable trifle. Director Nora Ephron has fun
skewering her own business in the script she co-wrote
with her sister Delia, and her eye for quality craft
makes everything sparkle as it should. Even if we have
yet to see the definitive remake of an old TV show on the
big screen, at least Bewitched is well more than
run-of-the-mill as so many adaptations have been, and so
many will be.-- Ted Fry
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