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Waitress
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Average rating
(62%)
 
Starring: Keri Russell | Nathan Fillion | Cheryl Hines | Jeremy Sisto | Andy Griffith | Adrienne Shelly | Eddie Jemison
Director: Adrienne Shelly
Studio: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 107 mins
Collections: 100 Hot Hits
Genres: Comedy | Romance
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Released: April 28, 2008
Also available on: Waitress is also available on Digital

This charming comedy from late director-writer-actress Adrienne Shelly is the perfect mix of sweet and sour. FELICITY'S Keri Russell stars as Jenna, a waitress stuck in a marriage to a less-than-lovable lout (Jeremy Sisto, SIX FEET UNDER). When she learns she's pregnant with his baby, she seeks solace in two things: pie-baking and an extramarital affair with her hunky but nervous Doctor. Jenna's relationship with Dr. Pomatter (Nathan Fillion, SERENITY) gives her something to look forward to as her husband grows ever more controlling and her baby bump gets larger.

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Highest rated reviews

41 out of 43 people found the following review helpful:

*** May contain spoilers ***



Waitress

SAI81 from from Tonbridge, 19th August, 2007

Adrienne Shelly's fourth film as writer/director is one of those wonderful surprises that the cinema, every so often, hands to you. At first glance you've seen it all before; a woman (Russell) trapped in an unhappy marriage to a man she doesn't even like anymore (Sisto) who falls pregnant and looks for a way to escape the rut her life is in, perhaps through a relationship with the handsome new doctor in town (Fillion). As with so many things though Waitress is all in the execution. Shelly's script just sparkles. It's loaded end to end with jokes, the great bulk of them laugh out loud funny. What makes Waitress stand out though is that all these jokes feel organic. These aren’t words put into people’s mouths, they come from the characters, each of whom establishes his or her own distinct voice. Shelly wisely keeps the direction simple for the most part and the film grounded solidly in reality, which allows the scripts broader moments to be easier to accept. She’s also helped in this by her excellent cast. Keri Russell is an actress I’ve only seen briefly and, to be honest, never thought a great deal of. What a difference here. The whole movie rests on Russell’s shoulders and she’s brilliant in it. Jenna’s a cutie and a sweet person but Russell and Shelly refuse to make her perfect; she can be short tempered, she cheats on her husband with a married man and she doesn’t love her coming baby…. And yet Russell is so magnetic and funny that you can’t help but love Jenna and root for her every step of the way. Nathan Fillion is effective as the constantly on edge Dr Pomater and his effortless way with a one-liner, honed under Joss Whedon, is a gift for the movie. The pie diner at which Jenna works provides a strong supporting cast too with Cheryl Hines amusingly dense, but not a little touching, as Becky and Shelly herself, sweetly funny as Dawn. Also worth mentioning are scene nabbing turns from Eddie Jemison and from Andy Griffith. Waitress, unlike most rom-coms, doesn’t offer simple answers. It doesn’t tie everything up in a nice neat bow with everyone happy and smiling as the credits roll. It’s much more interesting and shaded than that. That said this is an amazingly sweet film, but one which manages to carry that tone off without becoming so sugary as to be cloying. There is sadness behind Waitress though. This is the final film by Adrienne Shelly, soon after it was completed and mere days after its acceptance to the Sundance film festival Shelly was murdered in a senseless attack in her office. There could be no better tribute than this film, it’s as alive and as engaging as any released in a very long time and will ensure that though we won’t have any more films from this hugely promising writer/director we’ll remember and treasure this one at least.

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29 out of 37 people found the following review helpful:


Book a table.. this is worth a watch...

PaulaWestwood from from Ashton-Under-Lyne, 22nd August, 2007

A very nice quirky, thoughtful, rom-com that is certainly not run of the mill stuff, it follows the very different but somehow fused characters in, and surrounding, a diner style pie house in the U.S.A. That is the U.S. 'mommas' sort of pies - not the ones with steak and kidney in from Wigan ! There are quite a few little side plots and stuff that really draw you in rather than distract you, and the whole is a wonderfully acted, wonderfully scripted and warmly made peach of a film that I would definately recommend.

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27 out of 29 people found the following review helpful:


Bittersweet! A must watch!

A Customer from South West London, 18th August, 2007

I wasn't too keen on watching a movie about a waitress whose only talent was making pies inspired by the mood she was in. But after having read about Shelly's death and the fact that she died before knowing how successfully her movie was received by the public, I decided to go and see it. And I was certainly not disappointed. The movie has real depth, and alot of thought was put into the plot development.It tells the story of a young waitress in some hick town in the deep south, who is married to a man she doesn't love.Her life is lacklustre except for her only passion: making pies,which she does really well. Her plan is to set aside some money and then run away and leave her husband, but becoming unexpectedly pregnant sets off several events that allow her to start her life anew, in a very unexpected (and very moving) way . It's a really positive, upbeat film with a real life affirming message. It saddens me that such a young talented film maker and actress (Shelly who also plays one of the waitresses in the movie) should have died so young, but her last contribution, this movie is beautiful and significant and won't be forgotten!

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19 out of 22 people found the following review helpful:


Dissapointing

A Customer from Leeds, 12th February, 2008

This film was rubbish. Really boring and predictable. Me and my best friend were expecting a well written, interesting and engaging film. It was none of these. If i wasn't so tight, i would've left the cinema, it was that bad.

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Most recent reviews


Misandry Again

Mox from from Chipping Norton, 7th August, 2008

This could have been a good film if the feminist element had not spoilt it. It started well and had an entertaining as well as thought provoking dialogue. However it let itself down by portraying the few men in the film as either cruel or stupid, or both. The ending in particular was truly feminist, but also ironic: salvation for the waitress turned out to be living alone without men, with an only female child, making pies - all financed by money provided by a man.

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All icing and no cake

A Customer from London, 7th August, 2008

I was so, so disappointed in and puzzled by this movie. Disappointed, because many of the reviews I'd read had led me to expect a profound commentary on how an oppressed woman finds joy and salvation, and instead I found it banal. Puzzled, for the same reason. My experience of this film was so at odds with that of many professional reviewers that it has made me question my ability to tell if a film is good or bad. It was somehow dishonest, I felt, to show the eponymous waitress achieving a state of fulfilment without showing how she'd got there. There was no psychological insight at all offered into why characters behaved as they did. Call me a prude, but I was just appalled by the way an affair with a happily-married man was thrown into the mix - and then just snuffed out, without comment, as easily as if it had been a little tiny birthday cake candle. The film looked like it would deal with the very serious subject of how a wife handled a rotten, desperate relationship with an insecure, controlling oaf of a husband and an unwanted pregnancy - but it just didn't. The beautiful close-ups of food and clever use of 1950s 'American pie' 'All American Housewife' imagery, updated to look believable today, were impressive and, if the story had had any moral value, would have worked beautifully and ironically. I checked out the commentary with the actors after this film ended and found that it shed no light on what the movie was about.

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Superb

A Customer from Somerset, England, 6th August, 2008

I was thinking about this film for days afterwards. Uplifting and very poignant given that Adrienne is no longer with us. A lovely film to view.

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Good

A Customer from SPALDING, 6th August, 2008

Very simple, but Very good.

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