Aquamarine

Allen, E. (2006). Aquamarine. DVD, 20th Century Fox.
ASIN: B000FCW15A
$14.98


Viewer's Annotation: Claire and Hailey agree to help a mermaid find someone to fall in love with her in just three days.


Summary: Best friends Claire and Hailey are crushed, as Hailey is scheduled to move to Australia in five days. They make a wish for a miracle to keep them together. What they get is a mermaid tossed into their swimming pool by a freak storm. Aquamarine, the mermaid, has struck a deal with her father. If she can prove the existence of love in three days, she doesn't have to marry them merman her father has chosen for her. Aquamarine offers Claire and Hailey a wish, if they will help her find someone to fall in love with her over the next three days.


Genre: movie, fairy tale, family, fantasy, friends, love story


Series : This movie is not part of a series, but it is loosely based on a novel by Alice Hoffman with the same title.


Evaluation: A lighthearted movie that will provide entertainment, if not enlightenment.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: All three of the actresses in this movie will be familiar to tweens, and that alone would be a draw. Combine the big names with a fairy tale love story, and you've got a winning combination. Probably bound to be a slumber party classic.

Watchalikes :
  • Nancy Drew
  • The Prince and Me
Other Useful Info:
Reviews:
from the Boston Globe
She lives in the sea, but still needs a hunk
By Wesley Morris 03/03/2006

I'm not a lust-ridden 'tween-age girl, but if I were and a mermaid happened to find her way into my swimming pool, the last thing I'd do is take her shopping and let her steal the boy of my dreams. But I'm catty and shallow. The two best friends in "Aquamarine" are sweet and fair. So when the bubbly Aquamarine (Sara Paxton) winds up in a Florida beach town after a storm, Claire (Emma Roberts, who's Eric's daughter and Julia's niece) and Hailey (the pop singer known as JoJo) try to give her what she wants. Love. Of course, at sundown Aqua's legs turn back into a tail, which means she doesn't have much time to find it.

According to Aqua, her father plans to marry her off to a merman she doesn't love. Dad doesn't believe love exists. She insists it does, and daddy gives her three days to prove it. The boy she picks is Raymond (Jake McDorman), the same permanently shirtless lifeguard Hailey and Claire have been wanting all summer. But if they help a mermaid, they get a wish, and since Hailey is about to move to Australia, they enlist in Project Love and plan to use their wish to stay together.

If I were these two I'd be wishing for filmmaking better than the ABC Family Channel stuff they've got. But 12-year-old girls won't care that some of the overdubbed dialogue in "Aquamarine" makes it seem like a lesser work of Italian neorealism. (The ones who do should write me. I might know some 13-year-old nerds who'd love to watch "Open City" with you.)

Most girls will just be pleased that Alice Hoffman's book has been faithfully adapted, that Roberts has inherited the family's good dental work, that Paxton is like Reese Witherspoon with a tail, and that JoJo is playing someone other than the underage vixen she does in her PG music videos. The town vamp is Cecilia (Arielle Kebbel), the dangerously tan, Mandy Moore-monster who is also in pursuit of Raymond. (He's the only boy in town worth wanting.) Girls will hate her, but if the intended audience is anything like Claire and Hailey, they will come to feel sorry for her, too.

"Aquamarine" is part "Splash" and part "Clueless" (when that dressing-room montage comes hurtling toward you, duck). But girls will know "Aquamarine" is unique because it's the rare movie that fiercely respects the altruistic loyalty that bonds girls to one another. Cute boys Hasselhoffing in slow motion on the sand come and go, but a best friend is forever.

No comments: