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Safe Haven (2012)

 
Safe Haven 2013
Safe Haven 2013
Safe Haven 2013

 
Film Info
 

Director(s): Lasse Hallström
 
Writer(s): Leslie Bohem, Dana Stevens, Nicholas Sparks
 
Starring: Julianne Hough, Josh Duhamel, Cobie Smulders
 
Genre: Drama | a href="http://moviefarm.co.uk/category/mystery/" title="Mystery Films" target="_blank">Mystery | Romance
 
Synopsis: Mysterious Katie is bidding to start afresh in sleepy Southport, North Carolina tries in vain to keep herself from forming any emotional ties to anyone or anything in the area.
 
US Release Date: 14 February 2013
 
UK Release Date: 1 March 2013
 
Produce: ,
 
Acting
 
 
 
 
 


 
Direction
 
 
 
 
 


 
Enjoyment
 
 
 
 
 


 
Soundtrack
 
 
 
 
 


 
Story
 
 
 
 
 


 
Total Score
 
 
 
 
 
3.5/ 5


User Rating
2 total ratings

 

Peaks


The final plot twist that will have you weeping like you’ve just lost your pet.

Troughs


Can’t measure up to the book from which it was adapted.


The Quote

Nicholas Sparks’s latest weepy adaptation Safe Haven is a sure fire hit for girls’ nights in in the future.

1
Posted March 9, 2013 by

 
Content
 
 

Our Film Review:

Nicholas Sparks is infamous for delivering tearjerkers, with The Notebook and Dear John already to his name. The author’s silverscreen adaptations have accounted for more than their fair share of teary eyes and Safe Haven continues that trend – with a previously unseen thrilling edge.

The film centres around the mysterious Katie (Julianne HoughRock of Ages) who is bidding to start afresh in sleepy Southport, North Carolina, fighting to free herself from a mysterious past. As she settles into the seaside resort she tries in vain to keep herself from forming any emotional ties to anyone or anything in the area.

The owner of the local store – Alex (Josh DuhamelTransformers) begins to take a shine to the new arrival and all seems well. It appears that Katie has finally found her safe haven, focusing on the future with new best friend Jo (Cobie SmuldersHow I Met Your Mother) supporting her along the way. However, a dark secret is hot on her heels determined to keep her from making a new life in Southport or anywhere.

Hough and Duhamel combine well as the pair of reluctant lovers with great chemistry despite working against their own inconvenient pasts. Smulders – though limited in terms of screen time – is exceptional as Jo engaging a particularly powerful confrontation with Katie. David Lyons is particularly stellar in the supporting cast, bringing to life a character who is difficult to translate from page to screen with frightening force.

The film culminates in a thrilling finale which, until this point, has been far from Sparks’s trademark, with his works usually being about as dark and sinister as a poodle eating a marshmallow. However, the dark undertones are delivered with panache by director Lasse Hallström who continually hints there is more beneath the surface of this idyllic second chance love story without giving everything away too early.

As the audience reels from the pulsating climax, Sparks’s final pièce de résistance is again handled beautifully by Hallström leading to a memorable “no way!” moment as the final frames play out and the tears fall.

Unfortunately, writers Leslie Bohem and Dana Stevens are hampered by a limited running time but do their best to condense a powerful novel into a surely unforgettable girls’ night in film for years to come.

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James McLaughlin

 
James McLaughlin
I’m a 25-year-old trained journalist with the film taste of an overly romantic 16-year-old girl. Follow me on twitter @JS_McLaughlin


  • http://www.facebook.com/paul.h.anderson.12 Paul Anderson

    I thought it was a decent enough love story but the thriller elements were terribly done and took a lot away from what could have been a much more emotional ending.