Playing It Cool

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Playing It Cool
Promotional poster
Directed byJustin Reardon
Written by
  • Chris Shafer
  • Paul Vicknair
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyJeff Cutter
Edited byCatherine Haight
Music by
Vertical Entertainment
Release dates
  • September 26, 2014 (2014-09-26) (Estonia)
  • May 14, 2015 (2015-05-14) (United States)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.3 million

Playing It Cool is a 2014 American

Vertical Entertainment.[1]
It received generally negative reviews from critics.

Plot

Me is a screenwriter in LA who wants to write action flicks, but his agent, Bryan, needs him to write a rom-com first. Due to mother abandonment issues from his childhood, he doesn't let love in or believe in it, so finds writing about romance difficult.

His buddy Scott is obsessed with romantic books and movies. He’s had a crush for ages on a guy who works at a bookshop. He is tortured, hoping the feelings could be reciprocated.

Me wants to show love as it is in his perspective, not funny nor romantic. Every time anyone has told him they love him, he says he doesn’t think he’d be able to reciprocate. So, he constantly hooks up and then says he doesn’t see a future with them

Then Me meets Her at a charity event, bantering together with ease. Me finds himself really drawn to Her, but suddenly they meet her boyfriend ‘Stuffy’, and she gets whisked away. When he tries to get her out of his head by hooking up quickly with anyone else, for the first time it doesn’t work. He goes back to the venue to see if he can get her name, but there is no one left to ask. Desperate, he steals the guest book.

His misfit group of friends are all writers: Lyle is prolific yet still unpublished, Samson is a married graphic novelist, Mallory writes and performs one woman shows she makes them attend and of course Scott. Me tells them he is trying to find Her. Most are cynical about marriage and love, while Scott is supportive.

Me goes to see his granddad, who tells him he must search like Columbo. Me and Scott makes the rounds of charity events, hoping to run into Her. After a plethora of events, he is embarrassed at one when the host puts Me on the spot to talk about works that he has previously bragged (lied) about. Her is actually at the event, so they reconnect, and he gets her to agree to a ‘friend date’. Afterwards, when he gives her a lift home, she mentions an upcoming charity event.

The next day, Scott is again his only friend supportive of love; his other friends try to dissuade him, with Mallory openly hostile.

Me shows up for the event, to find it is actually her yoga class. Their connection continues to strengthen. Chatting in a café, he asks her about ‘Stuffy.’ She describes him as stable, safe and liked by her family and friends. Her dream wedding is at one of the heart sculptures in San Francisco. Me finally confesses that he ‘likes’ her, which she says won’t change her plan.

At home, Me takes out his shoebox, looking at the goodbye post-it note his mother had left him. At handball the next day his granddad and Scott convince him not to give up on Her. That evening, when he convinces her to go out, she talks about her dad’s suicide when she was young, and they kiss.

Her calls Me up because she can’t get him out of her head, and before long, they end up in bed together. For the first time, he doesn’t feel guilty. Her, on the other hand, leaves feeling badly. She calls again, everything is going well, until his dishonesty about the charities surfaces and she stomps away. Mallory finally confesses she loves Me when he asks her for help. The next morning, Her wakes him with a call, only to confess she is already engaged.

A night of binging, followed by making a fool of himself at her apartment and his granddad dying, gets Me back on track. His writer's block melts away and the rom-com gets done. Scott finally gets a date with that guy, Mallory gives a ‘friend’ a chance. Me realizes he has to try to stop the wedding. After a flight, cliché run through an airport and a taxi ride, and checking all of the heart sculptures, Me finds Her

The end message: Love isn’t a thinking thing, it’s a feeling thing. Live your own story.

Cast

In addition, Ashley Tisdale and Matthew Morrison make cameo appearances as themselves.

Production

Pre-production

The script for the film was originally titled A Many Splintered Thing and was first on

Nicholl Fellowship.[2]

Filming

The film began filming in late 2012 in Los Angeles and completed in early 2013. The film is produced by Voltage Pictures and Wonderland Sound and Vision.

Release

The international trailer was released on September 17, 2014.[3]

The film was released in Estonia on September 26, 2014, Latvia on October 17, 2014, South Korea on October 23, 2014 and Romania on December 26, 2014.[4]

On November 5, 2014 it was announced

limited release on May 8, 2015.[8]

The film premiered at the Dallas International Film Festival on April 11, 2015.[9]

Reception

Critical response

On the

weighted average, assigned the film a score of 30 out of 100, based on 10 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[11]

Box office

Playing It Cool grossed $1.3 million at the box office.[12]

References

External links