Under The Tuscan Sun

Under The Tuscan Sun

Mid-July. Under the Tuscan sun. Probably a very good reason not to see Audrey Wells’ postcard pretty, clichéd adaptation of Frances Mayes’ bestselling novel about personal reinvention post-divorce. Therapy through scenery for rich American divorcées is ideal chick-flick material, and if

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Wed 06 Jul 2005 10:00 PM

Mid-July. Under the Tuscan sun. Probably a very good reason not to see Audrey Wells’ postcard pretty,

clichéd adaptation of Frances Mayes’ bestselling novel about personal reinvention post-divorce. Therapy

through scenery for rich American divorcées is ideal chick-flick material, and if added to the mix are

amusing locals and their charming ways, quaint foreigners with their difficulties of integration, and the

obligatory toy-boy/hunk, the formula hardly improves. Even a would-have-been Fellini starlet transmits

only a dash of local colour. Rising above this, and just about holding the picture together is a strong

performance from Diane Lane – at least in the first half – before the movie finally loses touch with

reality. Under the Tuscan Sun? Go to the beach.

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