Rewind, Review, and Re-Rate: ‘The Other Woman’: A Comedic Debutante Ball for Leslie Mann

Mark Jackson
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Under-used comedic powerhouse Leslie Mann had heretofore been eclipsed by her comedy-dynasty-ruling husband, Judd Apatow. Then along came 2014’s “The Other Woman.” While this mediocre farce about cheating husbands is not overly special, Leslie Mann certainly was. Talk about underrated; with “The Other Woman,” Leslie Mann had arrived.

Also, a new comic duo was born. Teaming up with established comedy-heavyweight Cameron Diaz in the straight-man role (straight man is the acting term for the earnest one in a comedy duo), Mann and Diaz are a serious funny-team.

Sleuthing

Carly Whitten (Cameron Diaz) is a Big Apple lawyer in a passionate romance. Celebrating their eighth-week “anniversary,” she suggests to lover Mark (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) that he meet her dad (Don Johnson). That might be a bit hasty. Mark avoids meeting dad, continually. He’s married, of course. Carly finds out, and, like the tough lawyer she is, cuts him off at the knees.
Carly Whitton (Cameron Diaz) and Mark King (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) play lovers, in "The Other Woman." (Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox)
Carly Whitton (Cameron Diaz) and Mark King (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) play lovers, in "The Other Woman." Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox

Now, Mark’s non-working wife, Kate (Mann), is an apparent ditz who feels very strongly she should go to “brain camp,” and also take the memory herb Ginko Balboa. Mark: “No honey, it’s ‘Ginko Bi-LO-ba.’ It’s not the Rocky movie.” When Kate’s world gets turned upside down by Mark’s cheating, she stalks Carly for answers.

At first, Carly’s not having it. But soon they’re deep into a womance. (I had to look up the opposite of a “bromance.” I found “bra-mance,” and “womance.” Let’s go with womance). They bond. And so begins the classic situation: While the man is off philandering with impunity, the womenfolk pool their intuitive talents and smoke him out.

And surprise, surprise: there’s yet another mistress. That would be 22-year-old Amber (supermodel Kate Upton). Amber is recruited into the womance trio. They say “hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.” Try three of them.
(L–R) Amber (Kate Upton), Carly Whitton (Cameron Diaz), and Kate King (Leslie Mann) play women with hell-like fury in "The Other Woman." (Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox)
(L–R) Amber (Kate Upton), Carly Whitton (Cameron Diaz), and Kate King (Leslie Mann) play women with hell-like fury in "The Other Woman." Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox

Payback, Performances

The trio uses standard cinematic female revenge methods: On the ladies’ “Cheater Chore Calendar” we find laxatives, powdered estrogen in his coffee, toothbrush-used-as-toilet-brush, and Nair in the shampoo bottle. All of which are a prelude to some serious damage involving Mark’s ill-gotten financial Bahamian holdings.
(L–R) Kate King (Leslie Mann), Carly Whitton (Cameron Diaz), and Amber (Kate Upton), grill the philandering snake in their lives, in "The Other Woman." (Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox)
(L–R) Kate King (Leslie Mann), Carly Whitton (Cameron Diaz), and Amber (Kate Upton), grill the philandering snake in their lives, in "The Other Woman." Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox

As mentioned, while normally in the clown role, Diaz holds down the fort as straight-woman while Mann clowns. Rapper Nicki Minaj as Carly’s secretary scene-steals across the board: it’s more like scene-hoovering due to sheer force of personality.

Exceedingly curvy swimsuit model Kate Upton, in her movie debut, having clearly been cast for her curves, isn’t really an actress yet. But she’s definitely got potential; she’s believable. In fact, it’s this surprising believability that establishes the fact that the womance trio of The Law, The Holy Matrimony, and The Phenom Bod (all blondes, by the way) can take down any fool man. Not a blonde joke in sight. Ok, maybe the ginko balboa joke is a blonde joke.

(L–R) Kate (Leslie Mann), Lydia (Nicki Minaj), Carly (Cameron Diaz), and Amber (Kate Upton), observe the utter humiliation of the sneaky man in their lives, in "The Other Woman." (Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox)
(L–R) Kate (Leslie Mann), Lydia (Nicki Minaj), Carly (Cameron Diaz), and Amber (Kate Upton), observe the utter humiliation of the sneaky man in their lives, in "The Other Woman." Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox

Coster-Waldau, as bad husband Mark, is a German Denis Leary lookalike. And while he looks the part of a classic rake, he also manifests a decent talent for “taking the hit” and playing the fool. The scene where a particularly heinous form of female-fury torture necessitates Mark to ditch his Armani suit-pants on a bathroom floor and arrive home wearing a pair of skinny jeans, is a sidesplitting howler. Not to mention the manic clutching at the last vestiges of his dignity in a towering (and very satisfying) crash and burn à la “The First Wives Club.”

Mark King (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau),  in "The Other Woman." (Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox)
Mark King (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau),  in "The Other Woman." Barry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox

All Mann

Ultimately, though, “The Other Woman” showcases Leslie Mann. Her comedy forte is wallowing in the throes of humiliation. She anchors us in the reality of it, and then extends it way over the top. That’s great comedy. She also plays a mean drunk.

It must be said that there needed to be a Razzie award for “The Other Woman” for most clichéd background music in a motion picture. The girls put on ninja costumes to spy, and what gets played? The theme from “Mission Impossible.” And that’s just for starters.

Other than that, “The Other Woman” is a fairly hilarious womance comedy. You’ll laugh even if you don’t want to. Raise a glass to Leslie Mann. It’s truly surprising there wasn’t an explosion of movies in the wake of “The Other Woman” featuring her.

Movie poster for "The Other Woman."
Movie poster for "The Other Woman."
‘The Other Woman’ Director: Nick Cassavetes Starring: Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, Kate Upton, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Nicky Minaj, Taylor Kinney Running Time: 1 hour, 49 minutes MPAA Rating: PG-13 Release Date: April 25, 2014 3 stars out of 5
Mark Jackson
Mark Jackson
Film Critic
Mark Jackson is the chief film critic for The Epoch Times. In addition to the world’s number-one storytelling vehicle—film, he enjoys martial arts, weightlifting, motorcycles, vision questing, rock-climbing, qigong, oil painting, and human rights activism. Jackson earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Williams College, followed by a classical theater training, and has 20 years’ experience as a New York professional actor, working in theater, commercials, and television daytime dramas. He narrated The Epoch Times audiobook “How the Specter of Communism is Ruling Our World,” which is available on iTunes and Audible. Jackson is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic.
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