There’s No Safer Place in the World than Right Here with Me: My Thoughts on “Safe Haven”

safe havenOn Valentine’s Day, I took my mother to see the newest big screen rendition of a Nicholas Sparks’ novel. Romantic movie on Valentine’s Day, totally unpredictable, right?

Synopsis:

Safe Haven is a romantic drama starring Julianne Hough and Josh Duhamel. Katie (Julianne Hough) is a young woman running away from a dark past when she ends up in Southport, North Carolina and meets Alex (Josh Duhamel), a widower who runs a small grocery store. Usually Southport serves only as a pitstop on the way to bigger cities, bigger destinations. Katie, however, makes the small town pitstop her new home. Captivated by Katie, Alex begins to woo her through random acts of kindness. At first, Katie is reacts aggressively toward kindness, but through the help of her newfound friend, Jo, Katie learns to accept Alex’s advances. Eventually Katie opens up her heart and learns to love Alex despite her own insecurities. Then Katie’s past catches up with her, and Alex struggles between  his desire to love Katie and his instinct to protect his kids.

Review: 

I would define Safe Haven as an “okay” movie. The plot did not seem to tackle anything new and safe haven screenshot2much of the plot was predictable. I did not predict the “twist” ending. In fact, I was rather somewhat put off by the sudden turn of events. I felt as if the plot had not fully committed to bringing about this specific ending. The plot seemed vague and wishy-washy in order to purposefully take the audience off guard with the surprise ending. It’s a personal pet peeve. I’m not a fan of blurred plot lines because they purposefully trick the audience in order to pull off a “magic trick” ending.

The acting was good but seemed forced on occasion, but I feel like this could be said about many romance movies. Sadly, I don’t feel like the characters ever won me over. I didn’t respect or empathize with them. Again, I feel like this lack of connection came through the forced plot line. Don’t get me wrong. The movie had moments of excitement, but overall the movie didn’t speak to me in a significant way. I know that the romance movie genre in general doesn’t attempt to shake its viewer’s world. Still, the viewer should take away something from the movie, and I don’t feel like I took anything away. At all.

Hey,I’m a girl. I enjoy my romance movies. Safe Haven, however, will not make it into my movie collection.I give the film 5/10 stars. I’m not going to write the movie off as worthless, but I probably won’t see it again.

0saves
If you enjoyed this post, please consider leaving a comment or subscribing to the RSS feed to have future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Published by

Christina Jeter

Christina Jeter was born in Dallas, Texas. She graduated with a BA in English and Theatre. She has wanted to be an author since third grade. Writing is her passion.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Connect with Facebook

Please leave these two fields as-is:

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.