Perry Kate
Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
VeteranLight
I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.
ThrillMessage
There are better movies of two hours length. I loved the actress'performance.
Kamila Bell
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
mark.waltz
He's trying too hard to be charming and she's trying too hard to be obnoxious. He fails, but she succeeds. The British droll charm is getting old for Hugh, playing an Arthur like billionaire minus the booze and Liza. She's trying to be Gloria Alred, but just fails miserably. Together, we're supposed to believe that they are a match made in heaven, but the angels would have blasted them out due to the sparks they make, and it isn't a romantic one. If that isn't bad enough, a cameo appearance by a future President really added self indulgent gas to the film overall. The lack of star quality doesn't have an effect on the New York City scenery, heading out of Manhattan as Bullock's character tries to save a Coney Island community center. Dana Ivey and Robert Klein score as her parents, and many New York theater and soap actors round out the cast in a sensational ensemble. But the script just fails to convince me that these two characters would be the Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant of the millennium, lacking in class and humor. It also tries to be very New York millennium cool, taking on a Mets game with a gag that falls flat and the law community in a way that truly rings false.
Thanos Karagioras
"Two Weeks Notice" is a comedy and romance movie which has to do with a lawyer who decides to walk out of her boss because he used her a lot as a nanny of his. This movie explains to us what is the true meaning of love and how is this going to be between two people who are completely different.In this movie we have two people who are completely different and we also watch them for many times to argue each other. I think that the plot and the storyline are really great and I have to say that Marc Lawrence did a great job in the direction of this movie. Sandra Bullock who plays as Lucy Kelson makes a really nice interpretation and Hugh Grant who plays as George Wade makes an equally nice interpretation.Finally I have to say that "Two Weeks Notice" is a movie which has romance but with another version of it and I am sure that you will understand it when you watch it.
leplatypus
Really, Alicia was the star of the movie as she brings wit and energy to a rather lethargic movie.Honestly, if it's a comedy, it's not funny. The bloopers make me laugh more.If it's a romance, it's dull: the relationship between Sandra and Grant isn't convincing and not built. They compress nearly a year of relationship into one hour and the selection of scenes isn't very revealing.Worst, the movie is plagued by the Hollywood rule for romance involving big stars: the lovers are always from high society, live a plush and wealthy life thus the audience can't never relate to them. I got always the feeling that instead of talking about or inspiring our lives, they prefer talking about the lives of their too much-paid cast. In other words, when those overpaid movies stars ask millions to play their own easy lives on screen, they are despicable and their movies are crap. This one is a fine example of that discrepancy.
Spikeopath
Lucy Kelson {Sandra Bullock} lands a job as chief counsel for a big hitting New York real estate firm that is owned by mega-rich George Wade {Hugh Grant}. He's an engaging enough boss but he's very shallow, and Lucy finds that she's practically running his life for him. So finally tiring of being treated like a Personal Assistant, she gives her two weeks notice of resignation. But can the pair do with out each other? And is there more than a working relationship bubbling under the surface? For his first feature film directing assignment, Marc Lawrence played it safe and got lucky with his lead actors. Whilst hardly setting a new benchmark in the ROM-COM genre, Two Weeks Notice is however witty and not without charm. This is due in the main to the pairing of Grant & Bullock, who play it perky and spark a chemistry so sadly lacking in many other modern day films of its ilk. By their own admission the pair got on great off screen, and that is evident as the pair feed of each other to make the lightweight script work wonders. The dominance of the pair tho leaves little room for the supporting actors to breathe, with many of them coming across as mere fillers. It's this that stops the film from being the great film that Bullock, and particularly Grant's, efforts deserved.Enjoyable light entertainment that could have been better if more thought had gone into the outer characters. 6.5/10