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REVIEW: Ruby Sparks Blows Up Manic Pixie Dream Girl Myth

The title character of  Ruby Sparks is a 26-year-old painter from Dayton, Ohio played by Zoe Kazan, who also wrote the film’s screenplay, She has bangs and wears brightly colored tights. Her first crushes were on John Lennon and Humphrey Bogart. She loves to cook, can’t drive and doesn’t own a computer. Her problems, as someone points out, are all of the “endearing” variety. She’s also entirely the invention of Calvin Weir-Fields (Paul Dano), a blocked author who wrote a hit novel at age 19 and 10 years later, has yet to follow it up. Living a solitary life in Los Angeles, he’s advised by his shrink Dr. Rosenthal (Elliott Gould) to write about meeting someone while out walking his dog, Scotty. Ruby first appears to Calvin in his sleep, and soon he’s fleshing her character out on his typewriter. For the first time in ages, words come to him easily as he tells the story of how his literal dream girl meets and ends up with a guy who’s a lot like him. Directed by  Little Miss Sunshine ‘s team of Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris,  Ruby Sparks isn’t the exercise in stevia-dusted whimsy that it sounds like, especially once a flesh-and-blood Ruby suddenly materializes — exactly as Calvin wrote her — with no awareness that she began as a fictional literary character. This touch of movie magic is actually a way for the filmmakers to tartly examine the cinematic trope of the manic pixie dream girl and the larger problems inherent in searching for someone who’s perfect for you. Ruby is perfect for Calvin because he wrote her to be that way.  She’s not your stereotypical pneumatic blond lust object because while sex is certainly part of the relationship Calvin is looking for, control and security are more important. She’s adorable but vulnerable because she’s been treated badly. She’s eager to please, and though Calvin is nothing like the other men she’s dated, she falls in love with him instantly and even promises him, “I will never get sick of you.” As Calvin’s older, married brother Harry (Chris Messina) points out when reading his sibling’s description of Ruby before she ever manages her transition into the physical world, “you haven’t written a person, you’ve written a girl.” And Kazan has written a portrait of a self-pitying, self-protective creative type that becomes so progressively biting that the film’s hopeful epilogue doesn’t quite fly. We learn more about Calvin as he initially freaks out about Ruby’s presence — he thinks he’s going nuts until he realizes other people can see her — but then gratefully comes to accept it. In ebullient montages, the pair goes to an arcade and out dancing. They settle into a life together. Calvin and his brother figure out early on that Ruby is a malleable creation. Calvin can dictate his dream girl’s behavior by continuing to write about her. At first, he vows not to play God and locks up his work in a drawer, but Ruby starts to chafe at being Calvin’s sole companion and at being expected to support his self-centered behavior. His treatment of Ruby grows crueler and as we meet his ex-girlfriend Lila ( True Blood ‘s Deborah Ann Woll) and realize that his account of their breakup is seriously slanted. Ruby starts building a life away from Calvin, and soon he’s pulling out paper and trying to fix her problems with him (instead of himself). Dayton and Faris have created a very grounded L.A. for this not-so-grounded story. They make notable use of the all-white bungalow in which Calvin spends most of his days sitting by the backyard pool . Dano is very good at morphing from the shaggy, appealing literary genius he appears to be at the film’s outset into a troubled, not-so-nice guy who comes sharply into focus at film’s end. After all, Ruby Sparks  is  really about Calvin. Ruby is simply a mirror — which is why the ending strikes the only real false note of the movie. Calvin gets a dose of much-needed self-awareness and  what feels like the wrong sort of chance at redemption. As a whole, however, Ruby Sparks lands like a punch.  It’s a smart counter-jab to the many movies out there that put forth the myth that the world is full of quirky angels in ballet flats who are just waiting for some morose protagonist to come along in need of their love.  It’s as much of a fantasy as Kelly LeBrock emerging from a teenager’s PC. Real people have problems that can’t be dismissed with a sweeping sentence on a page — and real relationships involve compromise and dealing with those problems, not holding out for someone who indulges your every foible and asks nothing in return. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Ruby Sparks Blows Up Manic Pixie Dream Girl Myth

‘Contagion’ Slays ‘Warrior’ At Weekend Box Office

‘Bucky Larson’ flops as ‘The Help’ remains strong at #2. By Ryan J. Downey Matt Damon in “Contagion” Photo: Warner Bros We wouldn’t be surprised by a spike in hand-sanitizer sales over the weekend, considering how many folks saw “Contagion.” Filmmaker Steven Soderbergh’s procedural thriller — about a pandemic spread through doorknobs, Blackberrys and handshakes — was the #1 movie at the box office, with an estimated $23.1 million debut. “Contagion” — which stars a remarkable number of Academy Award nominees and winners — Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Winslet, Marion Cotillard, John Hawkes, Elliott Gould, Jude Law and Laurence Fishburne — has been a hit with critics, with 82 percent of them reviewing the film favorably, according to Rotten Tomatoes . “Warrior” also boasted 82 percent on the Tomatometer at press time but was only able to muster a paltry $5.6 million in its debut, landing the mixed-martial arts drama at #3 on the box-office chart. By comparison, “The Fighter” (which critics also loved) took in $12.1 million in its 2010 debut. By all accounts Adam Sandler and his Happy Madison pals had a blast making “Bucky Larson: Born to Be a Star,” but it’s unlikely they were pleased with the film’s reception. “Bucky” (which wasn’t screened in advance for critics) took in less than $2 million at 1,500 single-screen locations. The movie’s $1.45 million is less than half the opening-weekend number of “Grandma’s Boy,” which starred Bucky co-writer Allen Covert and “Bucky” star Nick Swardson. Meanwhile “The Help” continued to do great business, landing at #2 with another $8.6 million added to its five-week total (which now stands at over $137 million). The adaptation of the popular novel is now the 14th-highest grossing film of 2011. “The Help” co-star Jessica Chastain also appears in “The Debt,” which took in $4.9 million in its second weekend of release to land at #4. “Columbiana” rounded out the top five with $4 million in its second weekend of release. The Luc Besson-produced female-driven action flick has earned $29.7 million thus far. This weekend’s new releases include the highly touted Ryan Gosling flick “Drive,” which Variety wrote “takes the tired heist-gone-bad genre out for a spin, delivering fresh guilty-pleasure thrills in the process.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Contagion.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Contagion’ Slays ‘Warrior’ At Weekend Box Office

Breaking Bad Emmy Winner Aaron Paul Will Come to Your Christmas Party for $16,000

Perhaps the nearly year-long break between seasons of Breaking Bad has finally gotten to Aaron Paul. Either that, or he just likes that being famous means you can get paid thousands of dollars to drink eggnog at some millionaire’s Christmas party in Arizona. Paul — who won an Emmy for his Bad performance over the summer — was given $16,000 by entrepreneur Jason Hope to attend his lavish Christmas party, alongside fellow compensated guests like Snooki ($17,500) and Bruce Jenner ($15,000). Hey, it beats making crystal meth. [ TMZ ]

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Breaking Bad Emmy Winner Aaron Paul Will Come to Your Christmas Party for $16,000

12 Films of Christmas: The Silent Partner

Who says a Christmas movie can’t also be a twisty crime caper? Certainly not this excerpt from Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas : Bank teller Miles (Elliott Gould) realizes that mall Santa Harry (Christopher Plummer) is casing the bank for a robbery, so Miles arranges for Harry to steal what amounts to pocket change from the drawers while Miles stashes the big bucks away for himself, knowing that Harry will be blamed for the missing money. Unfortunately for Miles, Harry knows what he’s up to, and now he’s forcing Miles to hand over the stolen loot. Can Miles outwit this dangerous criminal — as well as his bright and flirtatious co-worker Julie (Susannah York) — and get away with the perfect crime?

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12 Films of Christmas: The Silent Partner

12 Films of Christmas: The Silent Partner

Who says a Christmas movie can’t also be a twisty crime caper? Certainly not this excerpt from Have Yourself a Movie Little Christmas : Bank teller Miles (Elliott Gould) realizes that mall Santa Harry (Christopher Plummer) is casing the bank for a robbery, so Miles arranges for Harry to steal what amounts to pocket change from the drawers while Miles stashes the big bucks away for himself, knowing that Harry will be blamed for the missing money. Unfortunately for Miles, Harry knows what he’s up to, and now he’s forcing Miles to hand over the stolen loot. Can Miles outwit this dangerous criminal — as well as his bright and flirtatious co-worker Julie (Susannah York) — and get away with the perfect crime?

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12 Films of Christmas: The Silent Partner

‘I Spy’ Actor Robert Culp Dies

‘Greatest American Hero’ star was 79. By Josh Wigler Robert Culp Photo: Michael Tullberg/ Getty Images Robert Culp, star of television series “I Spy” and “The Greatest American Hero,” died after falling outside of his home in Hollywood on Wednesday (March 24). The Los Angeles Times reports that Culp, 79, fell and hit his head while out for a walk in his neighborhood. A jogger discovered Culp and alerted authorities. The actor was pronounced dead shortly after his 11 a.m. arrival at Queen of Angels hospital in Los Angeles. Lieutenant Bob Binder of the LAPD told The Times that Culp’s death was “accidental and there appears to be no sign of foul play.” An autopsy by the Los Angeles County Coroner’s office is currently pending. Although Culp first attained public attention in the late 1950s as Texas Ranger Hoby Gilman on Western television series “Trackdown,” the actor’s big break came in 1965 when he landed the leading role of Kelly Robinson on “I Spy,” a TV series that ran for three seasons until 1968. The program focused on Culp’s character, an international tennis player, and his trainer, Alexander Scott (Bill Cosby). Both Robinson and Scott used their sports occupation as a cover story to disguise their real jobs working as secret agents for the United States government. The show achieved critical acclaim and both Culp and Cosby were nominated for three consecutive Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series. Cosby won all three awards. In 1981, Culp delivered a co-starring turn as FBI Agent Bill Maxwell on “The Greatest American Hero,” an ABC television series starring William Katt as an average teacher who developed superpowers after a chance encounter with extraterrestrials. Maxwell is assigned as the teacher’s new partner. Recently, Culp held a recurring role on “Everybody Loves Raymond” as Warren Whelan, the father-in-law of Ray Romano’s character. On film, Culp was best known for playing Bob in “Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice,” a critically acclaimed 1969 comedy dealing with the notions of free love and open marriage. He appeared alongside fellow actors Elliott Gould, Natalie Wood and Dyan Cannon.

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‘I Spy’ Actor Robert Culp Dies