0
Skip to Content
Cinefile - Film Reviews
Reviews
Blog
Publications
About
Contact
Cinefile - Film Reviews
Reviews
Blog
Publications
About
Contact
Reviews
Blog
Publications
About
Contact
O One Fine Day (1996)
one_fine_day_1996_1920x1280_273905.jpg Image 1 of
one_fine_day_1996_1920x1280_273905.jpg
one_fine_day_1996_1920x1280_273905.jpg

One Fine Day (1996)

£0.00


Country: US
Technical: col 108m
Director: Michael Hoffman
Cast: George Clooney, Michelle Pfeiffer, Charles Durning

Synopsis:

Two New York single parents end up depending on each other during a rainy working day, when they miss putting their charges on a school trip. Mutual antipathy inevitably blossoms into something else, with a little help from the kids.

Review:

Impossibly old-fashioned romantic comedy reworking elements of the Nora Ephron stable; it trades on the charm of its two stars, who shape up pretty well. The colour cinematography, however, has that drab gaudiness that had become a feature of the genre: no one takes the trouble to light anything well anymore.

Add To Cart


Country: US
Technical: col 108m
Director: Michael Hoffman
Cast: George Clooney, Michelle Pfeiffer, Charles Durning

Synopsis:

Two New York single parents end up depending on each other during a rainy working day, when they miss putting their charges on a school trip. Mutual antipathy inevitably blossoms into something else, with a little help from the kids.

Review:

Impossibly old-fashioned romantic comedy reworking elements of the Nora Ephron stable; it trades on the charm of its two stars, who shape up pretty well. The colour cinematography, however, has that drab gaudiness that had become a feature of the genre: no one takes the trouble to light anything well anymore.


Country: US
Technical: col 108m
Director: Michael Hoffman
Cast: George Clooney, Michelle Pfeiffer, Charles Durning

Synopsis:

Two New York single parents end up depending on each other during a rainy working day, when they miss putting their charges on a school trip. Mutual antipathy inevitably blossoms into something else, with a little help from the kids.

Review:

Impossibly old-fashioned romantic comedy reworking elements of the Nora Ephron stable; it trades on the charm of its two stars, who shape up pretty well. The colour cinematography, however, has that drab gaudiness that had become a feature of the genre: no one takes the trouble to light anything well anymore.

Copyright © 2012-2023, David Clare. All rights reserved.