Love And Other Drugs
Love & Other Drugs is a 2010 American romantic drama-comedy follows the encounter of a free spirited Parkinson patient and charming drug rep working for Pfizer.
12 March 1984, Greenville, South Carolina, USA
20 July 1975, Detroit, Michigan, USA
1983, USA
30 April 1944, New York City, New York, USA
May 03, 2015
Hathaway creates a tough, angry, complicated woman who deserved better than her lot in life. For starters. she deserved a better movie.October 14, 2013
This movie is far from your standard romantic comedy. It's a deeper film that touches on heavier emotional moments.December 17, 2010
But in Love & Other Drugs, [Zwick] and Herskovitz find a groove that delivers wry writing and smart cultural observation.January 27, 2013
Lacks a certain something, but not chemistry between Jake and Anne. They set off real sparks.November 30, 2010
as many weak spots, but what it delivers at its core is as indelible as (and a lot more explicit than) the work of such legendary teams as Clark Gable and Joan Crawford, Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn.December 27, 2010
Ultimately, the unsettled tone undermines the romantic conclusion. Still, you've got to admire the ambition it shares with its cocky hero.November 24, 2010
This movie is best treated like dim sum. Wait out the bad portions until a tastier dish is served. Let Hathaway be your guide.December 03, 2010
A slick weepie made by smart guys who want you to know they're better than the schlockmeisters.November 09, 2013
Love and Other Drugs isn't a perfect film, and Zwick has certainly done better, but for what it is, it's mostly watchable and fairly enjoyable.July 14, 2011
Charismatic turns from its two stars provide the heartbeat for the movie, which resembles director Edward Zwick's TV show thirtysomething with its insight into male/female intimacy.January 04, 2011
Eight months after health-care reform was signed into law, Universal Pictures courageously weighs in with a watered-down satire of the pharmaceutical industry.May 26, 2013
Zwick and his writing partners, Marshall Herskovitz and Charles Randolph, overextend their scope by a wide margin.