Jersey Girl

2004 Comedy Drama

Writer and director Kevin Smith embraces his warm and fuzzy side with this comedy drama about a man who learns a lot about life and love in the wake of a personal tragedy. Ollie Trinke (Ben Affleck) is a guy who seemingly has it made -- he has a great job as a music publicist with a major Manhattan public relations firm, and he's madly in love with his wife, Gertrude (Jennifer Lopez). Ollie is very much excited about the fact he and Gertrude are soon to become parents, but Ollie's joy turns to despair when Gertrude dies in childbirth. Emotionally shattered, Ollie isn't sure what to do next, and he and his newborn daughter, Gertie, soon move to New Jersey to live with his father, Bart (George Carlin), who grows tired of playing babysitter after several months. Juggling his career with single parenthood proves to be more than Ollie can manage, and one day he's fired after he bungles a major press event. Unable to find work, Ollie eventually takes a dead-end job in New Jersey's public works department, and devotes himself to his daughter as he retreats from his own life. But after frequent visits to the local video store, he strikes up a friendship with Maya (Liv Tyler), a pretty girl who works behind the counter. As Ollie finally begins to come out of his shell, he's offered a chance to move back into the music industry, but he realizes that would mean moving back to Manhattan -- and Gertie (Raquel Castro), now seven years old, makes it clear she doesn't want to go. Jersey Girl also features cameo performances from Kevin Smith regulars Jason Lee and Matt Damon, and significantly is Smith's first feature not to include Jason Mewes and Smith himself as stoner archetypes Jay and Silent Bob. more..

Director: Kevin Smith

Starring: Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler, Raquel Castro, George Carlin, Jennifer Lopez

Reviews

  • Liv Tyler is a very particular talent who has sometimes been misused by directors more in love with her beauty than with her appropriateness for their story. Here she is perfectly cast.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    26 April 2013

  • Eloquent and unapologetically cute.

    Wesley Morris - The Boston Globe

    26 April 2013

  • Smith is looking more and more like a developing major talent, so it could be years until we get a handle on this movie's legacy. The film is not only defensible as a cute one-shot, but also as a positive sign for the future.

    Mike Clark - USA Today

    26 April 2013

  • Affleck is modest and engaging, which keeps the movie out of "Gigli" territory. But it's close.

    Peter Travers - Rolling Stone

    26 April 2013

  • The film's overall construction is faulty. Its dramatic situations ring consistently false, and the story is phony as anything off the Hollywood assembly line. And yet, it's sincere phony.

    Mick LaSalle - The San Francisco Chronicle

    26 April 2013

Awards

  • Worst Actor of the Decade

    Razzie Awards (2010)

     
  • Best Performance in a Feature Film - Young Actress Age Ten or Younger

    Young Artist Awards (2005)