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  • About Adam received new life after Kate Hudson became almost famous. But while Hudson plays a key role this film is, quite literally, about Adam, as played wonderfully by Stuart Townsend. The film begins with young Irish singing waitress Lucy, as played by Hudson with an Irish accent that comes and goes, meeting the mysterious Adam. She immediately falls for him and their new romance proceeds happily along. Lucy brings Adam home to meet the family and here things get turned on their head. After seeing the story play out from Lucy's perspective we go back and revisit the same time period from different points of view, those of Lucy's two sisters and brother. It soon becomes apparent that Adam is not quite what he seems and that he has become much closer to Lucy's family than she would ever believe.

    Frances O'Connor as the quiet, bookish Laura and Charlotte Bradley as the unhappily married Alice will each strike up their own serious relationship with Adam. As we see each of the sisters' stories unfold it puts a new spin on all that we have seen before. Even Lucy's brother finds himself oddly attracted to Adam while Lucy floats along completely oblivious to all that is swirling around her. Each of the key roles is performed well and enough time is given to allow us to explore the motivations of each of these characters. If we didn't really get to know these people and what drives them, everyone involved could come off rather badly, especially Townsend's Adam. But the director makes each character sympathetic enough and it all ties together very well.

    A clever script, mostly terrific acting, intriguing characters, wonderful Irish scenery and a very smart plot device that adds a unique twist to everything...About Adam has a lot going for it. It's a smart, funny, enjoyable ride.
  • 'About Adam' is a male counterpart to Gerry Stembridge's classic TV drama, 'the Truth about Clare', his innovative film about Ireland and abortion. In that film, three characters tried to grope, through memories, prejudices, egotism, blindness etc., the truth about the title character, a pregnant woman who died following an abortion in England (it is still illegal in Ireland); here, four characters try to capture the essence of the elusive Adam, a jack of all relationships but mastered by none.

    A knowledge of Stembridge's previous, more sober film gives this breezy comedy a darker edge - its tale of a family being given everything they sexually desire is an appropriate metaphor for a society like Ireland currently going through an unheard-of economic boom, creating a culture of extreme self-interest. The dangers of this self-interest are plain to see - a few weeks ago another Stembridge TV satire was aired about Ireland's racist treatment of refugees.

    We have never had this much prosperity before, and we don't want anyone else sharing it. Similarly, the last person this film is 'about' is Adam. Like 'Clare', the film is structured around the personal narratives of each character involved with Adam - Lucy (Kate Hudson, and, I'm afraid, the hype for once is spot-on - she IS adorable), the spontaneous, singing waitress with a new boyfriend every week, who finally settles down to a 'great passion'; Laura (Frances O'Conner - can there be any doubt now that she is our finest actress?), the pretentious, uptight English post-grad doing a thesis on repressed Victorian women writers who is 'loosened up' by Adam, her assumptions revealed to be a lie; David, the brother, dating a prim virgin, enlisting Adam's help and finding himself sexually attracted to him; Alice, the elder sister, trapped in a prosperous marriage to a pompous dullard, intrigued by Adam, but unwilling to lose control like her siblings that easy.

    Each narrative is tailored to each witness' personality (like 'Dracula', an ironic allusion throughout), in the way each story is shaped; in the stylistic devices employed; in tone; but, most importantly, in the perception of Adam. 'Clare', for all its excellence, played to that age-old myth, the mystery, inscrutability, unattainability, unknowability of woman. 'Adam', the first man, remorselessly documented throughout thousands of years of masculine culture, is suddenly the mystery, the woman, the sphinx, the passive black hole.

    Adam (which may not even be his name) is the blank onto which the various characters project their fantasies - he is literally what they want him to be. Naturally, plot points overlap within the four stories, and our interpretation of them changes with greater knowledge, but, paradoxically, our knowledge of Adam diminishes, helped by the lies and stories he spins about himself. Who is Adam? Besides the obvious pleasure of bedding three beautiful women, why does he do it? In fact, forget that 'besides', that's probably your answer.

    As well as alluding to his own work, Stembridge cleverly remodels two other classics of sexual amorphousness. Like Terence Stamp in Pasolini's 'Theorem', Adam is a stranger who enters a bourgeois household where everyone has a stereotypical role they adhere to, and which Adam smashes, forcing them to review their lives and the assumptions they live by. This has a liberating effect, but also a joyful one - this is a remarkably angst-free film. With his blank good looks, his white suit, and bleached blonde crop, Stuart Townsend (hi Celia!) is a ringer for the young Stamp.

    The other allusion is to 'Alfie', that freewheelingly amoral sexual cad, lying his way through a score of beautiful women. Except Adam is the anti-Alfie, he does not humiliate or diminish women, they're the ones who develop; and he lacks the controlling power of narration; but he does limit them, reducing them to 'mere' sexual urge.

    Significantly, both these films were key artefacts of the 1960s, and there is an optimism, a freshness, a vigour, a lightness to 'About Adam' that resembles the swinging 60s, as if Ireland, belatedly, has entered its own hedonistic decade. Both films, equally significantly, were warnings or analyses of that decade's fatal complacency, and in the exhilerating shots of Dublin that dot the film we cannot fail to notice the looming cranes, the building activity that suggests this story isn't quite finished, this culture hasn't quite reached maturity.
  • Turfseer27 January 2009
    Warning: Spoilers
    'About Adam' is billed as a comedy but it's safer to classify it as a farce. It's set in Dublin and it focuses on a family of three sisters and one brother who all become besotted with Adam, a charming Lothario, who insinuates himself into their lives. Unlike most American films where men end up chasing a beautiful woman, 'About Adam' turns the tables and we're treated to the farcical machinations of women who can no longer control their passions when attracted to that one special 'mysterious' man.

    'About Adam' has a Rashomon-like plot where the story is told from the successive points of view of each sibling. We start off from Lucy's point of view (Kate Hudson) who meets Adam at her place of employment (where she works as a waitress/singer). Lucy is looking for a man who will sweep her off her feet. I'm not sure how Adam manages to press all the right buttons of these women, but they all become besotted with him. The initial seduction of Lucy goes on for way too long and after awhile her obsession with him becomes tiresome (the first 30 minutes is the weakest part of the film).

    After about half an hour into the film, conflict finally emerges. Soon after meeting Lucy, Adam decides to seduce Lucy's sister, Laura (Frances O'Connor). Laura is more intellectual than Lucy, studying for her PhD in poetry. And of course Adam is familiar with the very obscure poetry Lucy has been studying at school and recites it to her, pressing her buttons. Before you know it, Laura is stripping off HER clothes for him! Adam isn't finished. Brother David finds himself attracted to Adam and fantasizes having a bi-sexual affair with him. He doesn't actually act upon his fantasies but Adam somehow engenders a passionate spark in him and he ends up with a new invigorated love life with his girlfriend.

    Finally there's Alice, trapped in a loveless marriage who also has a child. Alice is aware that Adam has been playing around with BOTH of her sisters and when she finally gives in to Adam before his marriage to Lucy, it's on HER terms. She knows it's just a fling, but the brief affair with Adam awakens her long repressed sexual passions.

    For those who were 'offended' by this film, they completely miss the purpose of farce. In the words of the noted drama critic Eric Bentley, in farce, one is permitted the outrage without the consequences! Farce allows its audience to experience deep-seated desires vicariously! While the sisters feel there is some deeper meaning in Adam's name (noting that Adam is the name of the progenitor of all men), one should liken him more to the Greek God Pan, famous for his sexual powers and often depicted with an erect phallus.

    The world of 'About Adam' features no recriminations. While some feelings are ruffled, none of the characters suffer any permanent psychic damage. Even Laura, probably the most besotted and jealous of the sisters, accepts Adam's marriage to Lucy and we see her holding hands with her school supervisor at the end of the film, now ready for a mature romance in the real world. And although Adam is always lying to each of the women about his background, the lies are white lies--inconsequential; again resulting in no harm (Adam even suggests to Lucy who is having second thoughts about getting married just as they're about to tie the knot, that people don't always have to know each other's secrets; that way, petty jealousies are averted!).

    'About Adam' is like a gentle breeze. It's a light-hearted farce not to be taken too seriously (for all of you offended by its alleged 'immorality', I say get a life!). In addition, it's an original take on the desire for passion in our lives. On the other hand, by the end of the film, we realize that the film's tension has dissipated. All that fun 'passion' unleashed in each sibling by the charming rake Adam, has become a bit repetitious and overdone. In other words, we get the point! By the end there are no more surprises! Since 'About Adam' is a bit offbeat and good-natured, I give it a '6'. But honestly, while 'About Adam' is definitely worth watching, one viewing is enough.
  • On the face of it, it seems a little much that a no doubt sexy guy will attract females like a magnet including three sisters, one of their brother's girlfriend - and the brother - but it could well happen I guess. That in essence is roughly the plot, so if that appeals you'll probably like the film - it's reasonably well cast, adequately acted, nicely filmed and moves along at a fast pace. But if that plotline sounds too superficial, you can't stand seeing an E-type jaguar painted pale blue and aren't overly excited by Dublin as a setting, then you'll probably find it a bit ho hum. The promise of lots of appealing sex scenes will also be disappointing - certainly there is some action in that department but filmed very prudishly. However, Irish films are a rarity so that may be enough in itself to tempt a viewing.
  • B245 July 2003
    Warning: Spoilers
    Whatever happened to the real Ireland we know so well from all those Hollywood films of yore? Barry Fitzgerald, or at least his ghost, is nowhere to be seen in this hip little tale. And not a sound from Bing Crosby. Nor any nuns nor IRA types nor leprechauns nor prelates seducing altar boys. I thought "Angela's Ashes" had brought us up to date on Irish history, but, my goodness, just look how things have changed on the Emerald Isle!

    All facetiousness aside, some of the comments written here by Irish viewers are impressively insightful and full of true reflections that could as well have been made years ago about life in that tiny country. That this film comes out of a modern and progressive (to some extent at least) culture is obvious,and no Irishman need labor over an apologia to that effect. One must remember that these same streets were known to James Joyce and Jonathan Swift.

    As to the film itself, only a fool could take it seriously. It is a one-note "spoiler" from beginning to end, with no true center by way of an intriguing plot. The shifts back and forth in time to suggest multiple points of view have indeed been done before in much better films than this. The characters are apt and comely, but with little depth. Romantic comedy needs an edge, as well as some surprises, to make it go the distance. Everything here is just too likeable.

    Hmmm. I guess the same thing might be said of Barry Fitzgerald.
  • "About Adam" is a cheerful pentangle, helped along by a charming young cast, unpredictable quirkiness and Irish blarney.

    Kate Hudson, in what was her first film role, shows off her Mom's smile to good effect.

    Frances O'Connor is atypically frenzied. And so on.

    All inspired by a lovable, enigmatic rogue whose sensuality turns on at least three sisters and a brother.

    The song choices are surprisingly conservative traditional pop, culminating effectively in Peggy Lee.

    (originally written 6/15/2001)
  • JamesHitchcock30 December 2003
    Warning: Spoilers
    Possible Spoilers

    Most films about Ireland are about either the Troubles, or the Catholic Church, or a crowd of loveable, happy-go-lucky rustics, so it comes as something of a surprise to find an Irish film set in middle-class Dublin with very little mention of religion and none at all of sectarian violence. Indeed, there is so little specifically Irish about this film that with a change of accent it could easily be relocated to London, New York or Los Angeles.

    The film is told in a number of episodes, each seen from the point of view of a different character. The central character, Adam, is a handsome, charming young man who is engaged to a waitress named Lucy but nevertheless seduces not only Lucy herself but also her two sisters Laura and Alice and her brother's girlfriend Karen, and comes close to seducing the brother himself.

    A plot like this could easily be the stuff of tragedy, but here it is treated strictly as a comedy. Unfortunately, it veers between two different comic genres, the romantic comedy and the sex comedy, with any humour there might be getting lost somewhere between the two. On the one hand, Adam is a promiscuous womaniser; on the other, he is the romantic gallant who wins Lucy's hand. The director and scriptwriter try to get round this contradiction by presenting Adam's behaviour not as exploitative but rather as liberating for the women concerned. The bookish academic Laura, the unhappily married Alice and the prim, virginal Karen are all shown as benefiting from their sexual experiences, nobody gets hurt, and all ends happily with a big white wedding.

    For all its modern urban setting, this film is about as realistic as one of Grimm's fairy tales. It is set in a fantasy world where everyone is good-looking, where jealousy does not exist, where sex (especially promiscuous sex) is an unqualified force for good, where a man can bed every woman he meets and still end up marrying the girl of his dreams, and where a woman's surest way to find happiness is to get laid (preferably by Adam). And leprechauns exist and there really is a pot of gold at the end of every rainbow. If you like urban legends about knights on white chargers (or pale blue E-types) bringing sexual happiness to womankind, you will love this film. I am afraid it did nothing for me. 4/10.
  • This movie could be summed up as an Irish "Alfie". I thought it was a funny, romantic film that delivered a few plot twists that kept the movie entertaining.

    Expertly cast, Stuart Townsend keeps all of the girls in the film "ooo'ing and awwww'ing". Kate Hudson played a seemingly naive and always lovable character and bride-to-be. Frances O'Connor, Kate's sister was also brilliant in her portrayal of the lustful sister that you couldn't help, but enjoy.

    Is it worth a rental??? Sure! Could you drag your boyfriend to this and have him not fall asleep??? Definitely!

    While I didn't find this movie to have a great deal of comedic value, the trouble the characters get themselves into and layers of deception between each other making this chick flick interesting and worth a viewing.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    (All) About Adam has the makings of good dark comedy, but for some reason that is not the tone that the movie maker chose to use. Instead, an attempt was made to make a light comedy about a man who does some really ugly things. This supposed romantic comedy veers wildly into Jerry Springer territory, while seeming to assert that bad things that result in good outcomes for you are okay. Indeed, this film is wholly dependent on good outcomes for its characters. Even one bad outcome in this film would result in totally exposing how big a cad and creep Adam really is. It would also show how unsound the film's premise is.

    Wild child Lucy cuts a swath through the available men that she encounters, through a series of one night stands and short-term relationships. She's a heart-breaker who engages and drops men at will, uncaring of the damage and pain that she causes. This continues until she encounters the too-good-to-be-true Adam. She is immediately smitten. Is this a movie about Lucy receiving her comeuppance for her past behaviors? No, Lucy spends the movie blissfully unaware of all of the perfidy swirling about her. And, oddly enough, in a comedy based on amorality Lucy is the only individual who seems to have a conscience. In truth, Lucy ends up being the victim.

    Adam you see, is a manipulative seducer who works his way through her family,working his will on her sisters, her brother, and the brother's virginal girlfriend. Only the mother is spared, and he will probably get to her later. Why does Adam do this? We are never given an opportunity to really know Adam's motives and motivations. Instead, he serves as a cipher for others. We only get to see how others react to Adam in a Roshomon style retelling of his tale from the viewpoints of the various characters. Adam himself only offers that he has a "gift for helping others." And help them, he does. Sister Laura learns to be less repressed and to live her life experientially rather than intellectually, David is able to connect sexually with the girl of his dreams and to move their relationship on to another level and elder sister Alice re-learns sensuality and affection after a tryst with Adam a few hours before his scheduled wedding. The problem for the movie is that all of Adam's help is of a sexual nature. There are no kind words, no hand holding, and no words of wisdom--just sex. His stated desire to help is more self-serving alibi and justification than anything else.

    In the film Adam is extremely charming. He spins tale after tale (lies) that put him in the best light. Improbably, people (except for Alice) eat it up. Perhaps this is his true gift. Ulltimately, this film only works as a light comedy if you can like and identify with Adam and I couldn't. He presents to me as a smooth-talker who cares little about the consequences of his actions. In the real world families are destroyed,people get divorced and are killed for activities such as these. These thoughts might not have been so prominent in my mind if the filmmaker had not made the unfortunate choice of tacking a sentimental, traditional,romantic comedy staple to the end of the film-the interrupted wedding. It does not fit into the rest of the film. The words spoken ring hollow and lack sincerity given the things that came before it. Adam is uninterested in Lucy's secrets only because his are far more egregious. It is not a discussion about the boundaries and limits of love.The final scene only makes it worse. The sense is that there will only be more of the same and no larger lessons were learned. Somewhere over the horizon the till now avoided disaster awaits them and when it strikes the last seen smile and smirk on Adams face is sure to be wiped away.

    Finally, if I were a woman, I would find this film offensive. The assertion that all of a female's emotional problems, personal insecurities and dissatisfactions can be solved with a few well-placed lies and a few nights of good sex has an undertone of misogyny. Have doubts about those undertones? Make the Adam character a female instead and have her tearing through a group of brothers and see what images it conjures up for you. Neither a sex comedy nor a romantic comedy, this hybrid floats like a leaden balloon if you look at it too carefully. A charming creep is still a creep. When I look at Adam, that is what I see.
  • I did not even know the tag-line to the film About Adam (or All About Adam) but my first thought after I saw it was "He came, He saw, He conquered...them all." And it is almost identical with the film tag-line "He came. He saw. He conquered. One sister at a time." Gerard Stembridge's film belongs to the long suffered and rarely done well genre of romantic comedy or so called chick flick but this movie was a nice surprise. It has a twist to it, is amusing, enjoyable and funny, at least up until the very final. In the end, the writer/director seemed to have lost an interest of simply did not know what to do with his main character who could've been a lighter version or a younger brother to Pasolini's mysterious visitor in Theorem or, if asked Who are you, he could've answered, Just your average, horny little devil, not unlike Mr. Darryl van Horn. Yes, About Adam may not use any original ideas and it brings to mind immediately the movies as different as Theorem; Sliding Doors; He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not; the Spanish Oscar winner for the Best Foreign movie, Bell Époque, The Witches of Eastwick, and more than one Woody Allen's dramedies, Hannah and Her Sisters, particularly. The story of a charming mysterious man who makes every member of one family fall hard for him simply by being there and expressing the interest to each person's problems, troubles, and needs has been told many times but I personally was amused and smiled more than once while watching this little comedy and I found it if not a bright lost gem but a nice way to spend an hour and half following the adventures of a nice guy , every girl's dream come true who could make women happy because he knew exactly what each of them wanted, needed, longed for, lacked in her life, and dreamed about. I found especially funny always changing and adjusted for a particular listener the story of the powerful sexy mysterious collectible Jaguar, the perfect car for a sexy, mysterious, perfect man. Cinematically, the movie that takes place in Dublin is very pleasant, and I did not mind the repeating narrative that helped to look at the same scenes from very different perspectives and unexpected points of view. The young and talented actors and actresses including pre-Almost Famous very cute and singing Kate Hudson, Frances O'Connor and Charlotte Bradley as her older sisters, and Stuart Townsend as irresistible Adam all made their characters likable which is important for this type of film.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Give me a break! In what world does this director/writer live in? If anyone, after seeing this dribble, thinks it's a charming romantic comedy, then try a little role reversal and see if you still think it is. A woman, no matter how lovely her eyes may be, who sleeps with her fiancé's two brothers (one just half an hour before her wedding) would be deemed a whore and a slut. Not to mention that he's a pathological liar, to boot! How did this film get made?

    Maybe the backers thought an Irish film that wasn't about the Catholic Church or about the Catholic Protestant "troubles", would be refreshing, but please, this movie was hogwash from beginning to end.

    Kate Hudson, Stuart Townsend, Frances O'Connor and Charlotte Bradley made a valiant effort to make this screenplay work, but it was DOA..

    Do yourself a favor, steer clear of this one. It' not worth anyone's time. I just hope the actors got paid well.
  • In some ways this is an incredibly refreshing film. In it's acceptance that lust and promiscuity are normal facts of life and not something that lead to a lifetime of suffering and possibly eternal damnation, it's almost unique in Irish cinematic history. Seeing a film so free from the historical and religious baggage that shackles most Irish films can also be a bit disconcerting, like seeing one of the nuns that taught you in school wearing a mini-skirt and fishnet tights.

    Set far from the traditional Irish mise-en-scene in Dublin's trendy Temple Bar area, it features Stuart Townsend as a benign Irish cousin to Jack Nicholson in _The Witches of Eastwick_, who plays on the desires of three beautiful sisters for his own ends. Far from being a scheming Casanova, he's a likeable character who does nothing more than tell a few tall tales to aid his seductive techniques, and who helps people come to terms with themselves rather than cosign them to a life of guilt by doing so.

    This film is like Stembridges earlier film, Guiltrip, turned inside out. It's bright, urban-based, modern, and shows signs that Ireland is finally developing a mature attitude to Sexuality.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    i lived in Dublin when this film came out and it did catch the spirit of the time. Rich kids, trendy bars, just at the high point of the celtic tiger boom and Kate Hudson got the accent so 'roight' best Irish accent by an American I've heard. Another comment where they say it was useless(he is obviously an American 'top of the to you sor') its called a 'dart' accent. The film was a bit of an odd one alright Adam's personality and dress changes depending who he is wooing but he does it for all the right reasons 'a good shag and sure you'll be as right as rain'.

    I think it was the best Irish film to come out in a while.
  • I guess from my reaction to many a romantic comedy, some may think I'm male. Actually I'm a heterosexual female who enjoys ORIGINAL romantic comedy, but I also have half a brain and expect some degree of intelligence from films.

    The Laura character summed this film up pretty thoroughly for me. She is an English actor, meaning that two of the main characters, including of course THE main female lead, were not Irish. I can't be bothered repeating why this is extremely sad - it's been said so many times - but the marketing machine behind most movies will not change it's mind about shoving Americans (or Brits) into the leads in "foreign" films, no matter how much people complain. They want the bucks, you know, and a famous names DOES mean more bums on seats. Sad but true.

    I found this film uninspired. There were perhaps 2 or 3 genuinely amusing and surprising lines. The characters were pretty much laughable, in a bad way. Adam's justification for his machiavellian behaviour I found ridiculous and unconvincing. This guy is not altruistic - that much should have been patently obvious to anyone with a brain half the size of an ant's b**ls.

    I hung on to the end. Lord knows why as I tend to advise: if you don't like a movie, turn it off. Maybe I'm feeling rather masochistic today or maybe I kept hoping something was going to happen to make it worth my while. It didn't.

    That said, if you don't care about intelligent scripts or whether a movie rehashes themes/styles/plots that have been done better elsewhere many a time and if you like fluffy, pointless romantic comedy no matter what, then watch and enjoy! 4/10
  • The reason I say that is because I like the way they give different perspectives of several different scenes as seen by the different characters in the movie. I really like Stewart Townsend (he's one of those adorable people that are charismatic not to mention easy on the eyes). This is definitely NOT a cinematic masterpiece but I don't think it was meant to be either. It was entertaining and THAT's what I liked about it. Well, that and Stewart Townsend but I think I already mentioned that. Didn't sound like many people liked this one but I have to disagree. It's fun, sexy, flirtatious,and comedic all in one movie. Give it a chance and watch it again or for the first time, whichever the case may be.
  • I might have been able to enjoy this movie more if there was (a) more character development of Adam's actual fiance (b) there were actually consequences to Adam's actions (c) more character development of Adam and (d) a point. Alas, there was not.

    The idea itself, a cad who is out to seduce an entire family is an interesting story point. However, it was not handled with any deft or depth. We don't know why he does it, and in fact we are supposed to like a guy who brings such joy to this immoral family with his seduction and lies. We have virtually no idea why Lucy chose any of the men before or why she chooses him, especially since she cheats on him before the wedding with a sad sack of an ex; apparently to bring parity to the pathetic lie of a marriage they enter into at the end. There are also no consequences for the duplicity - which also could be fun and interesting, but in this movie it's not.

    I'm just surprised he didn't seduce the mother. Or did he?
  • Lucy (Kate Hudson, with a pretty good accent) is the youngest of three sisters in London. She and her slightly older sister, Laura (Frances O'Connor) still live at home with their mother, due to monetary circumstances. Lucy is a singing waitress at a cafe and Laura is a graduate student at the university. As it so often happens, the two younger sisters are complete opposites. Lucy is a beautiful and outgoing gal who has been through a ton of boyfriends while Laura is shy and saving herself for a truly great romance. One day, a new, handsome man, Adam (Stuart Townsend) enters the cafe where Lucy works. She is smitten and invites him out on a date. He accepts. Soon they are quite close and thinking about their future together. Yet, one day Laura meets Adam when she is out and about and they find they, too, have a strong mutual attraction. If they follow their impulses, what will be the consequences? This is an appealing romcom, mostly due to the very good-looking performers, but it has a bizarre plot that challenges the normal boundaries of a successful love story. Without giving too much away, the film could easily have been called Adam and the Three Sisters. As such, the boy meets girl concept here becomes more boy meets girl, girl, girl, with surprising results. Then, too, although the costumes are wonderful (Hudson has never looked lovelier) and the settings quite nice, the actors have a thick British accent that is sometimes difficult to follow. Therefore, while the production values are of the highest standards, making the film look great, beware romcom fans. If your idea of a successful, comedic love tale insists upon a man having only one true love, this may not be the film for you. Even so, most romance fans are eager to find a new watch and will probably accept this one as an interesting diversion for an evening.
  • paul2001sw-14 November 2006
    A lot has changed in Ireland in the last twenty years, and there's little of the old Oirishry on display in this film, which is set instead against a backdrop of posh department stores and stylish cafés. A glib, celebratory tone underpins what commences as a run-of-the-mill romcom, before the plot starts to venture into more unorthodox territory. But the film never really dares to take sides, and a weak conclusion suggests that all the tastier material should be reconsidered just as part of the froth. The result is an odd film, with all the flaws of a feel-good movie, but which doesn't actually make you feel good in the end.
  • God, Kate Hudson has the worst Irish accent! Stuart is the only one, I know because he is from Ireland, with a real Irish accent. The accents just kept switching back and forth. First it was British and then it was Irish, yadda, yadda, yadda.

    "About Adam" is a cute romantic comedy though. I have to admit it stole my heart for a few seconds. The story is a little odd and sometimes painful to watch, I admit. But if you give it a chance, it isn't so bad. I would give the green light for "About Adam". Especially if you love Stuart Townsend. *drool* Get me a towel! Sorry, sorry. So, if you have some time on your hands, check it out. It's a decent movie.

    7/10
  • This film promised a bit more than it delivered. I never laughed out loud and didn't find it particularly witty. The character, Adam, is intriguing, but in the end, he remains a cipher, lacking any depth or even comedic exploration of character. Perhaps I'm picky, but I also prefer movies that employ actors from the character's country. For instance, hearing Kate Hudson's unsuccessful accent attempts threw me right out of the movie several times. The real jewel of this film is the all-too-brief performance of Charlotte Bradley. That she portrayed nuances in character in this otherwise fluff of a film is remarkable.
  • redkiwi1 November 2001
    This film had potential, but lost its way as the silly script got worse and worse as Adam began to seduce more and more members of the same family.

    Compare this with Stuart Townsend's impressive big time debut in Shooting Fish and he has gone downhill.

    The supporting cast were competent - Hudson was very good - but this story went too far and became a parody of itself.

    Not bad, but not great either.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I think mar3429's comments hit it right on the nail for me (http://www.imdb.com/user/ur5155618/comments). I suppose a lot of women here did not find this insulting, but I sure did! Sex from a womanizer solves all your problems? On top of all the cheating, sisters actually willing to cheat with another sister's fiancé? I can't imagine ever sharing a man with my sister (which I consider as morally bad as incest, a sentiment that few may share but has been expressed in, say, Hamlet), and I certainly would not feel better after I did! I only finished the movie because I thought Adam and/or the sisters might learn a lesson. Or anyone learning a lesson that's not "sleep with Adam and you will be better off." No such luck.

    It's not that I think disgusting topics should never be filmed, but I can't believe it was made into a romantic comedy. What's romantic or funny about this? To put my opinion in perspective, however, I also think that movies in which people about to get married but instead meet some other person who is the man/woman of their dreams (e.g. Forces of Nature, Serendipity, etc.) is not romantic--that's called cold feet and unwillingness to commit! If you think you might feel the same way I do, please avoid this movie so as not to feel tortured.
  • I plodded toward the multiplex against my will, my girlfriend dragging me along as we went. '...but whyyy???' I moaned. 'Shut up with ya, we're going to see it, ya big ejit!' my girlfriend snapped. My reluctance to see 'About Adam' was based on previous experiences of experiencing Irish-made films, they were all the same - poor little, thatched cottage family living in repressed little ol' Ireland in the midst of poverty - boring! However, I actually really enjoyed 'About Adam' - with proper distribution and promotion - this could be a huge hit across Europe and the USA. 'About Adam', for a thankful change, shows Ireland how it really is - modern, stylish and prosperous. The people in the film aren't weeping throughout the entire film because their potato patch is unproductive, they are just like ordinary, modern Irish people - well, we don't all go sh**ging our fiance's entire family - but other than that it's real. The film is very witty and entertaining, if only a little slow at some parts. Kate Hudson has a surprisingly good Irish accent and Stuart Townsend is a well-cast star with a bright film throughout the film industry, here and abroad. 'About Adam' is a very positive and encouraging leap forward for the Irish film industry and is an example of how more Irish films should be made in the future - we're sick of dwelling in the past - it's the positive present and bright future people want to see. 'About Adam' bears more of a resemblance to 'American Pie' and 'Road Trip' than to 'The Field' and other such films. All in all, a good show. I encourage all, European, American, Australian etc, to see this film - not just because I'm Irish, but because it is a genuinely enjoyable, funny movie.
  • It's very seldom that these words are all used together in describing a film but that's the sort of film `About Adam' is.

    Adam is the ultra seductive boy who becomes involved with the `pretty sister' only to flirt with and ultimately seduce the other two as well. At one point he even has their entirely straight brother becoming aroused.

    This is not a great film but as romantic comedies go it's worth the time and it is very seldom that a film with this type of plot elements ends as happily as this one does.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I just don't get the good reviews. I found no redeeming value in this film whatsoever!

    Though neither prudish nor religious, I nevertheless missed, somehow, the delight that other viewers experienced in the lies and secret dalliances of Adam with his fiancée's sisters. Evidently no one had a problem with the groom engaging in affairs with his intended's family, or with sisters casually helping themselves to their sister's beau.

    The folks responsible for this film seem to glorify, or in the very least accept, unbridled deceit - as long as the primary deceiver is a charismatic charmer who can lie without guilt!

    All in all, I found "About Adam" as pointless and boring as pizza without cheese... and a total waste of time and money!
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