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The film is told almost entirely in flashback during that long-lost decade, the 1990s. Reynolds, of course, looks very much the same in any decade: When first we meet him in 2008, he's a corner-office ad exec being served his final divorce papers. Smartly capturing the ease with which we disconnect from the outside world, he slaps on his iPod, punches up Sly and the Family Stone's "Everyday People," and struts through a silent Manhattan — a dude living his own movie, scored to his perfect song. He then picks up his daughter, Maya (Abigail Breslin), who turns out to be one of those 11-year-olds in movies who sound like their 51-year-old writer-directors (Adam Brooks, in this case) when discussing things like love, sex, and relationships.
Maya wants to know how it all went wrong between her parents, and as a begrudging bedtime tale, Will lays it out for her, changing the names of the women in his life story in order to keep his daughter (and the audience) guessing Mom's identity. (Sounds like a very special episode of How I Divorced Your Mother.) As Will recounts his life in New York in the early-to-mid-'90s, he encounters several women with whom he will fall in and out of love, one of whom will become his wife and Maya's mother. Only, at the end of Will's story, the parents will be divorced, and Maya will be left with what she calls "a romantic mystery" absent its fairy-tale finale.
But before the unhappy present day, let us turn first to the promising yesterdays. It's 1992, and Will is a collegiate Young Democrat in Wisconsin dating the old-fashioned Emily (The 40-Year-Old Virgin's do-it-herselfer Elizabeth Banks). Emily refuses to move to New York, where Will has been hired to work on Bill Clinton's 1992 campaign— filling toilet-paper dispensers, it turns out. Working for Clinton, Will elects himself two best friends: Derek Luke's Russell, with whom Will eventually forms a political-consulting firm; and Isla Fisher's April, the freewheeling Xerox girl with the Smiths T-shirt who frowns on things like presidents and marriage. Also in New York is an old friend of Emily's named Summer (Rachel Weisz), who is a would-be writer shacked up with a cantankerous, decrepit, robe-wearing, chain-smoking, Scotch-drinking, pop-culture-loathing author-professor brilliantly named Hampton Roth, played by Kevin Kline. (Oh, would that the Roth character gets his own feature one day.)
And, over the course of the next couple of hours, Will and these bright, beautiful women keep crossing paths — as lovers, as disappointments, as friends, as what-coulda-beens, as what-might-bes. Brooks, whose French Kiss screenplay was as tony and old-fashioned a romance as Hollywood has made in 20 years, ultimately grounds the movie in the up-and-down everyday, in which yesterday's love affair is today's break-up is tomorrow's regret. As romantic and sweet and silly as the film can get — Weisz, out of nowhere, offers an unexpectedly touching, minor-key version of "I've Got a Crush On You" — ultimately it just shrugs and says, "Do your best, expect the worst, and you'll muddle through."
Of course, you could easily look at the movie as a well-timed portrait of one man's shattered affection for Bill Clinton — it encompasses his entire presidency, from the early Man from Hope love-in to Monica Lewinsky. Reynolds, muting his smartass qualities without dulling his timing, bemoans Clinton's parsing of words: "What happens when they give him a hard word?" he snaps at the TV as the president ponders the meaning of "is." Truth is, it's just an unexpected delight to find Reynolds in something resembling a grown-up comedy; he forever seemed destined to be the dude from Two Girls, a Guy and a Pizza Place. Maybe he's no longer a could-have-been, but rather a might-be-after-all.