
Opportunist Chris Bunce remains Pacific coast investment firm CEO Clark Cooper's favorite by being available always, also when he can snatch up deals Kate Reddy largely set up but lost giving priority to husband Richard and their kids. She gets a dream chance working for New York tycoon Jack Abelhammer, who proves most accommodating, amused by her faults, generous and able to sort of draw her back into enjoying life, so it looks like she'll have to choose when he offers her a... (Full plot summary below)
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Opportunist Chris Bunce remains Pacific coast investment firm CEO Clark Cooper's favorite by being available always, also when he can snatch up deals Kate Reddy largely set up but lost giving priority to husband Richard and their kids. She gets a dream chance working for New York tycoon Jack Abelhammer, who proves most accommodating, amused by her faults, generous and able to sort of draw her back into enjoying life, so it looks like she'll have to choose when he offers her an investment fund partnership.
Leave your thoughts about I Don't Know How She Does It.
| Associated PressChristy Lemire"I Don't Know How She Does It" suggests what might have happened to Carrie if she had two kids with Mr. Big to worry about, and less time to obsess over her wardrobe. |
| NewsBlazeKam WilliamsAn intriguing feminist manifesto suggesting that trying to be more like a man might be a waste of a woman. |
| The Movie MinuteJoanna LangfieldDo you have to be a married, working mom to really appreciate this one? Well, to be fair (one of the basic themes of this comedy), it's not going to hurt. |
| BrianOrndorf.comBrian OrndorfPanders to its audience instead of challenging the sensitive juggling act that working mothers face every day. This picture is not insight, it's a display of insipid wish fulfillment. |
| Daily Telegraph (UK)Sarah CromptonThe performances are an understated joy, particularly Brosnan, who convinces as the not-quite-romantic interest, and Kinnear, who makes goodness believable. |
| One Guy's OpinionFrank SwietekA chick flick that feels thirty years behind the times. |
| Metro Times (Detroit, MI)Corey HallSarah Jessica Parker's career no longer seems to involve acting so much as nurturing brand identity. |
| Philadelphia InquirerCarrie RickeyIn describing the conflict of a woman who has it all without enjoying it all, Pearson's book had teeth. McKenna's screenplay has only a smile. But is it ever good to laugh. |
| Sacramento News & ReviewJim LaneWhat saves things from becoming entirely dreary is its cast ... |
| Boston HeraldJames VerniereBesides the risk of asking recession-weary 2011 audiences to sympathize with an investment banker and talk about pensions we aren't getting, the film is a misfire. |