He Said, She Said
Cast :Kevin Bacon, Elizabeth Perkins
Director :Marisa Silver, Ken Kwapis
Studio :Paramount Home Video
Format :Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
Released Date :February 22, 1991
DVD Released Date :October 23, 2001
Language :English (Dubbed), French (Dubbed), English (Subtitled), English (Original Language), French (Original Language)
Audience Rating :PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateFebruary 06, 2004
Summary50's Romantic Comedy
Content
Very cute movie ...Doris Day, Rock Hudson type romantic comedy. I loved it ..Elizabeth Perkins is very sexy ....

Rating
DateJuly 11, 2003
SummaryExperiment based on the differences of men and women.
Content
The title of this movie is literally what it is: he said, she said. If you look closely at the credits the movie has two directors and two writers as well as two leads for a reason.

Basically the movie is two mini-films telling the same story of a couple meeting, competing, coupling, and spliting twice. The first half centering on Kevin Bacon was written and directed by men and the second half, centering on Elizabeth Perkins was written and directed by women. Not only do they use the same basic plot, but they use the same scenes, each shown not only from the POV of a different character, but a different gender.

Each mini-film alone would be a passible romantic comedy, but what makes the movie really work is the contrast. After seeing his side: what was important, what was stupid, what was good, what was bad we see hers and realize how something that is absolutely nothing to one is the most important thing in the world to the other. Most importantly the differences reflect generally common wisdom on the topic. Once has to ask if this is intentional or the natural byproduct of the differences between men and women.

Bacon is, as usual, himself (Kevin Bacon, much like John Wayne, plays himself in most movies and certainly the ones where he is at his best). However, the everyman Bacon is the perfect choice for this role. Perkins is very good as the self-assured but still vulnerable woman from the first generation of post-feminist revolution career women who has feet in both the feminist (career) and pre-feminist (marriage and family) world. She is as fully realized as her later sisters such as Ally McBeal and Bridget Jones.

Add in Sharon Stone as the tramp (and a more interesting one than Basic Instinct for my money) who realized she was in love but too late, Nathan Lane as the perfect mix of caring boss, and stir in good writing in pacing and the result is a funny and insightful romantic comedy and an above average movie.


Rating
DateMarch 14, 2003
Summaryhe said she said
Content
its one of the most romantic movies i ever seen!

Rating
DateApril 08, 2002
SummaryWhat can I say? I love this movie!!
Content
What I can say about this lovely movie is that it was a very original idea to show the two points of view (male and female) about the developing of their relationship. Full of tiny delicious details, both stories are perfectly credible in real life, and at the same time show moments of comic fantasy as metaphors of the way people interpret facts in real life (the narrative resource that makes the Ally McBeal's tv serie rocks!). I think the audience could identify themselves in the main characters, and that the main concept of the movie was cristal clear at the end of the movie, that, no matter the whole bunch diferences between the two stories, and between them, they loved each other. Two ways to see it, but one and only true feeling: LOVE.
AND THAT'S THE WAY I SEE IT!!

Rating
DateFebruary 07, 2002
SummaryMissing something...
Content
Bacon plays the perfect bachelor -- committed to his errant ways and happy to play the field. Elizabeth Perkins is the self-assured single woman, suspicious of field-playing men. Together they forge a new life, but with mixed results. When the relationship blows up, each tells their story from their own viewpoint. And, of course, the finer details differ greatly in each story, particularly when it comes to who was to blame for their problems.

It's a winning idea, and it's creatively delivered. However, the chemistry between Bacon and Perkins never quite gels. Part of me almost wants to tell Bacon to run off with Sharon Stone halfway through the movie. The script was a bit uneven, leaving several low-points throughout the film during which I was able to fetch a snack or two without missing much. However, the payoff is romantic and sweet enough to make "He Said, She Said" a good-enough movie that I wouldn't mind seeing again.

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