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Guides | February 17, 2009 | Comments (81)


We’ve all been there, every one of us. Maybe the relationship is cruising along gamely, or maybe you’re trying to keep it together with everything you’ve got. But sooner or later, everyone gets dumped. And around these parts, we have a healthy respect for the restorative power of movies on the brokenhearted, whether you’re wallowing in self-pity or burning old photos in effigy. Everyone has something they turn to in the aftermath of getting kicked to the curb: a movie where everything works out, one where everything falls apart, or one of the stories where things are left beautifully unresolved. With all that in mind, we here at Pajiba offer our selection of films for the aftermath of the break-up, no matter how it went down.


war_of_the_rosesguide.jpgWar of the Roses (1989): Back in the day, after a particularly painful break-up, I had a recipe for getting over them. I’d spend exactly one full day sad, pathetic, wallowing in my misery, and feeling sorry for myself. After that 24-hour period, I’d turn it all into blinding, seething hatred. It always made me feel better. And I am of the opinion that you need to really fucking hate someone before you can truly get over them. And if you truly want to hate, there’s no better movie than Danny De Vito’s deliciously dark comedy, War of the Roses. Romancing the Stone represented the courtship of Michael Dougles and Kathleen Turner, Jewel of the Nile was their marriage, and War of the Roses was their ugly, throw-shit-at-each-other divorce. It is two hours of contempt and unrelenting hatred. The divorcing couple takes everything that they have learned about each other over the years of their marriage and violently throws it all back in each other’s faces, finding every weak point, taunting one another with delectable spite. It is cathartic. And grimly funny. All great marriages should end with as much passion as they began with, and in the case of the Roses, the death of their marriage is more than metaphorical. Also, besides the commentary it makes on yuppie materialism, War of the Roses instructs you on the one thing you should never ask a spouse: “What the hell is wrong with you?” That’s a question you never want answered. — Dustin Rowles


lucyguide.pngIf Lucy Fell (1996): My choice isn’t based so much on quality so much as personal experience. When I was a sophomore in college, I went through a particularly devastating breakup and probably watched this movie at least ten times in the aftermath. In retrospect, it was all for the best, as I stayed friends with the guy and he turned out to be this right-wing asshole who sent me racist emails about Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign. (We no longer speak.) At any rate, If Lucy Fell is about two best friends and roommates, Lucy (Sarah Jessica Parker) and Joe (Eric Shaeffer), who make a suicide pact that if they’re both single by Lucy’s 30th birthday, they’re going to jump off the Brooklyn Bridge. Spoiler alert! The movie predictably ends up with the two friends kissing on the bridge. As an added bonus, it boasts a spectacularly schmoopy soundtrack by the 1990s soft-alt band Marry Me Jane, who sing nothing but weepy breakup songs the entire movie. It’s not a great movie, and it’s probably not even a good movie, but you know what? It sure as hell did the trick for me. And it even features a young, pre-rack Scarlett Johansson! — Stacey Nosek


bjonesguide.jpgBridget Jones’s Diary (2001): Most women have a Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant) in their past. You know the type: devastatingly handsome, impossibly smooth, and a total cad. The Daniel Cleaver is instantly recognizable, say, from the moment the elevator opens, and, should you choose to accept his proffered ride, it will be a glorious two weeks of thrilling, mind-obliterating sex before, oh look, he’s banging some American stick insect. Of course, you knew this moment of realization was inevitable, but that didn’t stop the Daniel Cleaver from infiltrating the panties premises. The thing is, when society looks down upon a thirtysomething singleton, one becomes rather desperate to ignore the warning signs of a Daniel Cleaver, which, preferably sooner than later, will unfailingly result in misery. Hell, it’s not nearly as awful to be a thirtysomething singleton as it is to be a thirtysomething divorcee and, eventually, Bridget Jones (Renee Zellweger) figures this out, as well as the fact that she should have given the slightly dull Mark Darcy (Colin Firth) more of a chance beforehand. A constant stream of absurdity — including the fight scene, the slightly obnoxious yet supportive friends, the discovery of the diary, and a brisk run through the snow in a sweater and knickers — allows this movie to escape the clichés, irritating preciousness, and rampant sexism to which most romantic comedies fall prey. Finally, there are those knee-weakening last moments when Bridget says, “Nice boys don’t kiss like that,” to which Mark Darcy replies, “Oh yes, they fucking do.” That, right there, is enough to allow me, at least for a few hours, to forget that Daniel Cleaver ever fucking existed. — Agent Bedhead


eternal_sunshineguide.jpgEternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004): My tendency when down is to reach for romance flicks that make me feel even worse about myself — ones that evoke that bottomless feeling of longing in your stomach and heart and head. I then pour myself into the tales of unrequited love, feeling the protagonist’s angst tear for tear. Oh, emotional cutting. Research shows movies like that aren’t always good for you. It’s true! So, I’m learning to avoid the pain-inducing tendencies by watching movies more realistic about life and love and the choices we make. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Michel Gondry’s (and Charlie Kaufman’s) 2004 gem, represents perfectly the beautiful disasters we create through relationships, romantic and otherwise, with its look at the oddly matched Joel (Jim Carrey in the best thing he’ll ever do) and Clementine (Kate Winslet), who each opt to have their memories of each other erased after their painful breakup. As each memory of Joel’s slips away, though, he and Clementine — in a Kaufmanesque manner — view with new eyes everything they in fact had as a couple, and they can’t help but be drawn to each other all over again. A secondary plot ends the same way, with a girl (Kirsten Dunst) again loving the man (Tom Wilkinson) she had erased from her mind. In a depressed state you could take these plots the wrong way, in that you’ll never get over your former love, but it’s best to view the positive truths they represent on what it means to love unconditionally. It is not about loving someone in spite of their flaws; their flaws come with the package. You just love them, and that’s why we all take the gamble in the first place. And if the person who just broke your heart can’t see that, well, screw them. You’re better off without them, right? … Right? — Sarah Carlson


swingersguide.jpgSwingers (1996): With all the beautiful baby swing-a-ding-ding, “You’re so money” gab, and a boy named Sue shooting House of Pain in WeHo just to watch him die, it’s easy to forget that Swingers is all about getting over a breakup. Mike (Jon Favreau, who wrote the script) hangs with Trent (Vince Vaughn, who will never surpass this role as long as he breathes oxygen) and the boys because he’s in mourning over being dumped by his long-distance girlfriend, Michelle. He’s been out of the game so long he doesn’t know how to talk to the L.A. women, mostly because they’re only interested in the type of car you drive or whether or not you’re excited because they’re wearing a backpack. When Trent finds him a girl, all he can talk about is the breakup. When he finds a girl on his own, he instantly fucks it up with one of the most painful answering machine message sequences in the history of cinema. Mike sinks into depression, only to be brought out of it by his friend Rob (Ron Livingston), who comes bearing orange juice, bologna, and this nugget of wisdom that still rings true: “She won’t call because you left. She’s got her own life to deal with, man, and that’s in New York. And she’s a sweet girl, and I love her to pieces, but fuck her, man. You gotta get on with your life. You gotta let go of the past. And Mikey, when you do, I’m telling you: the future is beautiful.” Mike finally puts aside all his bullshit, nuts up, and meets the wonderful Lorraine (Heather Graham). And when Michelle finally does call, he’s on the other line with Lorraine, and that moment becomes a victory for every guy who’s missed a girl he used to love. — Brian Prisco


dancerguide.jpgDancer in the Dark (2000): The cardinal rule of Bad Days: plunk down with comfort food and a film about people with problems way bigger than yours, because nothing nourishes the soul more than Doritos and a bit of perspective. Horror movies tend to do the trick, or documentaries about life in Freetown or Dharavi. But if you’ve been dumped, you’re probably in a world of narcissistic wound-licking that can’t be penetrated by anything less than a jackhammer. You need affect, dammit — visual, auditory and emotional. Cartoon frights or tidy socio-political facts are easily outgunned by the monster inside you howling to be purged, and when it’s time to get the cleansing started, tear-duct activation is Priority One. If you’re too grown up for Old Yeller or Born Free (and I suppose being dumped grows one up fast), look to the dreary Dane, Lars Von Trier, for succor. Dancer in the Dark ignited countless conversation contests about just how hard viewers sobbed when Björk exalted about seeing it all; cheating boy- and girlfriends shrink down to small fry next to the prospect of bleak factory work, blindness, and the death penalty. Selma (Björk) may have found relief in the Tinker Bell world of musicals, but there’s relief in Dogme realism, too, if you need more than a dancing hat and cane to distract you from a heavy heart. The John Hughes classics are fun little pills to pop when life’s upside-down, but let’s be frank: Sometimes only a truly masterful, truly transcendent movie can draw us out of the world — and out of ourselves — long enough to start the healing process in earnest. — Ranylt Richildis


fourweddingsguide.jpgFour Weddings and a Funeral (1994): There are a distressingly finite number of perfect moments in cinema, which is surprising given the amount of resources expended on films and the number of pictures made every year. Even more precious are those few instances where actor and words intersect at such a perfect angle that they form an arrowhead piercing through the bullshit and cynicism of film romance, piercing through to the viewer’s heart and soul. Near the end of Four Weddings and a Funeral, Matthew (John Hannah) delivers the eulogy for his fallen lover, Gareth. Through all the brainless (endearing, but brainless) antics of their straight friends, through all the clueless (hilarious, but clueless) coupling of the mostly heterosexual circle they complete, Matthew and Gareth quietly abided in a domestic bliss not acknowledged or encouraged by their society. As Hugh Grant muses, “All these years we’ve been single and proud of it and never noticed that two of us were, in effect, married all this time.” There is no scene in all of cinema that so lovingly pulls back the curtain of howling loneliness and fear of bereavement as when Matthew begins his halting, Scot-burred observation of the loss of Gareth, in “the words of another splendid bugger,” W.H. Auden:

Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone.
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone.
Silence the pianos and with muffled drum,
bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.

Let the aeroplanes circle, moaning overhead,
scribbling on the sky the message, “He is dead.”
Put crepe bows ‘round the white necks of the public doves,
let traffic policemen wear black, cotton gloves.

He was my North, my South, my East, and West,
my working week and my Sunday rest,
my noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
I thought that love would last forever. I was wrong.

The stars are not wanted now; put out every one.
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun.
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood;
for nothing now can ever come to any good.

Ted Boynton


sarahmarshallguide.jpgForgetting Sarah Marshall (2008): As with all good break-up tales, the pain and pleasure in Forgetting Sarah Marshall come from brutal, awkward experience. Star Jason Segel put actual autobiographical bits in the film, yes — the scene where he gets dumped while sitting naked on a couch came from his own life — but far more resonant is the way he’s able to communicate the various stages of confusion, denial, anger, and gradual acceptance and maturation as his Peter Bretter learns to deal with life without Sarah Marshall (Kristen Bell). There’s a temptation to wallow when you’ve been dumped, to overcome the grief by sleeping around, and to focus your resentment into anger at your ex; Peter does all of this, having ample opportunity to deal with his feelings while on a Hawaiian vacation next door to Sarah and her new man. But the film’s a great comedy, turning that rejection into weird and sharp humor, as it does in “Dracula’s Lament.” The movie is also the perfect fit for the newly single because its hero sets out to do exactly what the title says: Forget the old girl and move on with his life. The best moments in the film are when Peter’s closer to moving on than he ever though possible but is dangerously close to being pulled back into his ex’s orbit, and everyone can relate to the hellish choice between the unhealthy but easy and the fulfilling but hard. It’s impossible right after you’re cut loose and set to wander to do anything but live in the past, but the only way forward is to look to the bright future. This is one of those movies that reminds you how to do that. — Daniel Carlson


hifiguide.jpgHigh Fidelity (2000): High Fidelity is a good movie about relationships generally — about the things that attract people to each other, the difficulty in staying together, the alternating pettiness and profundity of love. But since the story is structured around John Cusack’s Rob trying to come to terms with past loves, it’s maybe best described as a break-up movie. And its most valuable piece of break-up wisdom — a moment that briefly stings, and then soothes — comes when Rob is talking to his old flame, Charlie (Catherine Zeta-Jones), after a dinner party. In voice-over, he realizes that “Charlie’s awful. She doesn’t listen to anyone, she says terrible, stupid things, and she apparently has no sense of humor at all.” This is not a universal experience — meeting someone again after a long time apart and loathing them — but the scene concisely speaks to the futility in pining for the past. Odds are, the past has had some work done. Earlier in the movie (and its source, Nick Hornby’s novel), Rob is astonished to find that Charlie is listed in the phone book. She’s become a “myth” in his head, someone who should be living in a distant galaxy, not listed in the White Pages. If you watch High Fidelity in the immediate wake of a break-up, the “Charlie is awful” moment won’t make much of an impression. But if you watch it several years after a break-up, with no need or expectation of relevant resonance, you might just nod along with Rob’s epiphany: that myths aren’t worth the time. — John Williams


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Comments

Fantastic list. I love them all.

Ted, that poem gets me sobbing every. single. time. I hold 4 Weddings and a Funeral as one of the great chick flicks of all time.

Posted by: figgy at February 17, 2009 3:23 PM

I love "Four Weddings and a Funeral" completely in spite of cardboard Andie McDowell. Jesus, they could have had a blow-up doll play her part! And I weep every single time I see the funeral and that eulogy. Beautiful, beautiful. I only hope someday someone feels that much for me.

"High Fidelity" completed mirrors my last relationship....and I am glad it's over. No myths, no moping, just .... moving the hell on.

Posted by: dammitjanet at February 17, 2009 3:24 PM

"Eternal Sunshine" and "High Fidelity" are two of my favorite movies. Possibly even Top 5 material. This also shows how women have shaped my film taste, which is kind of sad.

Posted by: schrome at February 17, 2009 3:30 PM

This is indeed a great list. Somehow, Swingers is always guaranteed to get me through the toughest of times.

Also, ESotSM, for me, serves as a stark reminder of just how priceless one's memories of a relationship truly are.

Posted by: Macafee at February 17, 2009 3:30 PM

Yes! War of the Roses! Win on all levels.

Posted by: twig at February 17, 2009 3:32 PM

You know what was a good "Movie for the Dumped"? "The Thomas Crown Affair".

True story: An ex of mine dumped me and the following day I called out sick from high school. Not because of the dumping mind you, but because I seriously was sick at the time. It was a bitch. However, that night one of my parents came home with a copy and we all sat down and watch the movie together. Despite the awkwardness of the Russo/Brosnan nakedness on the screen in front of myself and my parents, I was blown away by the movie, and I found myself feeling much better about the fact that I had been dumped.

The only explanation I can offer is perhaps that when one is broken and dumped, sometimes an adventure or some other sort of exercise in whimsy really helps. In this particular case, Pierce Brosnan only had to steal a couple of paintings, bang Rene Russo, and make Denis Leary look like a stand up guy to make me feel better about my own problems.

Posted by: Mike R. at February 17, 2009 3:42 PM

Ah Boynton, you never let me down. I was about ready to give up reading this list when I saw fucking Bridget Jones (I would dump someone just for liking that film), and then you list your reason for loving 4 Weddings. Truly the best scene of the film and a foreshadowing of how anguished John Hannah could dig to get at the true nature of the Rebus character several years later.

Posted by: PaddyDog at February 17, 2009 3:46 PM

Is there something wrong with me?

The only film on this whole list that I like is Eternal Sunshine. Many of the rest I truly loathe--Four Weddings failed to make me care a whit for its surface-y, empty characters. High Fidelity lavished love on the type of man who shouldn't be allowed to have a fish tank, much less a relationship with a human woman. Bridget Jones was just dumb as a sack of doorknobs. And those doofus boy-men in Swingers irritated me to the screaming point.

My general M.O. right after a breakup was to spend a lot of time with friends I had no sexual inclinations for, and do things and eat foods that my ex didn't like, and catch up on visits with elderly members of my family, and watch cheesy sci-fi movies.

Posted by: Jerce at February 17, 2009 3:47 PM

That answering machine scene is Swingers still makes me squirm. But it makes that phone call at the end all the better. And god, Vince Vaughn was adorable in that movie.

I will always have a soft spot for Bridget Jones, even if the second movie was godawful, it's the movies that get those little cringingly real moments right and then tie it all up satisfactorily in the end that are great. Because sometimes you just need a damn happy ending.

And I won't watch High Fidelity any more. I think I married Rob. Although if that makes me Iben Hjele then I'll take it. And I do love seeing him go back to all of those past loves and see all the flaws he never realized, in himself and them. Crap, I might need to watch it again after all.

Posted by: Anne (in Reno) at February 17, 2009 3:48 PM

Nice list and all, but what exactly is the "Ashley Madison quote-wink-nod-Dating-endquote-wink-nod-say-no-more Service? That's what I want to know.

I mean, it's really a call-girl agency, isn't it? All the "females" on the site are, naturally, single because it's a professional requirement.

Posted by: Neodiogenes at February 17, 2009 3:48 PM

Closer was a good one for me, it makes you afraid of being in a relationship and thus glad you are alone and dumped.

Posted by: Bridget at February 17, 2009 3:54 PM

Damn! Now THAT is a killer list. The ones on the list I haven't seen (Bridget Jones, Dancer in the Dark, and If Lucy Fell) are the only ones on this list I don't consider some of my favorite movies. And War of the Roses is even funnier now when I have actually gone through a tear-the-house-apart-and-destroy-everything breakup.

I was surprised "Four Weddings and a Funeral" was not listed in the best chick flicks diversion last week but I assumed it had something to do with whatever the definition of a true "chick flick" is.

Posted by: TylerDFC at February 17, 2009 3:55 PM

Ah, yes. Well, for me the trouble is that every one of these movies that I have seen (and loved) I saw with my now ex-husband, who came home one fine day and informed me that he needed to find himself, and left. So, while I do love to see them, there is still a lingering sadness about how much we had liked them together.

Posted by: Lindsey at February 17, 2009 3:56 PM

Maybe this is just me, but the (very few, and all by the same person ironically) times I've been dumped I want to watch movies with lots of blood and gore. I start reaching for Kill Bill or 28 Days Later.

Maybe it was just the situation, but I never got morose or depressed, it was more like "All that shit I overlooked for you and you can't be bothered to have a fucking conversation about how things have gotten a little stale but instead decide to cut and run? Fine. I hope you choke on it." Then I watch a shirtless, blood soaked Cillian Murphy beat the hell out of some dude and feel better.

Posted by: Genny (also Rusty) at February 17, 2009 3:57 PM

Genny, are you doing anything later?

Posted by: Macafee at February 17, 2009 4:00 PM

As an aside, one of the awesomest things about watching Bridget Jones Diary now is that one of her friends (the pretentious and bitter gay man who once had a hit song back in the eighties and has spun that into a decade of sleeping around) is played by none other than James Callis: the one, the only Gaius Baltar.

Posted by: stipe42 at February 17, 2009 4:00 PM

Genny, his name wasn't Max, was it?

I agree with the gore angle. Alien & Aliens always work for me, too. It's cathartic to scream along with Ripley...

Posted by: dammitjanet at February 17, 2009 4:03 PM

Excellent list! After my horrific, not-so-recent-anymore-but-still-excruciating breakup, I watched both Eternal Sunshine and Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Also, I absolutely love the W.H Auden poem.

Posted by: MissNev at February 17, 2009 4:04 PM

Janet: agreed. I'll always stand by the fact that "Get away from her you bitch!" is the best (and most cathartic) line in any action movie ever.

Posted by: Macafee at February 17, 2009 4:05 PM

You forgot to add the tragedy of Anna Chancellor being passed over for that MacDowell woman.

It's disgusting, it is.

"The War of the Roses" is underappreciated. And don't forget Danny's along to complete the trilogy!

I almost long for an actual breakup with the moody amorphousness I've been floating in for years, but not entirely.

Posted by: Jay at February 17, 2009 4:09 PM

DammitJanet, do you (like me) ever wonder how amazingly AWESOME Four Weddings and a Funeral could have been if they'd cast a real actress as Carrie instead of that appalling waste-of-film Andie MacDowell?

As for breakup movies, I do tend to fall more toward the angry/violent than the sappy/sad. Heathers was my favorite during my last real break-up. Although during a recent separation from Mr. Siege I will admit I for some reason watched Catch & Release like 12 times. (I know, it's really embarrassing, I'm sorry.)

Posted by: Siege at February 17, 2009 4:14 PM

Damn, this sucks. All these stories and shit, and me and my continuous, painful, soul-of-inifnite-darkness singledom have no idea what the hell you people are going on about.

But it all sounds very sweet, I suppose.

Posted by: Vermillion at February 17, 2009 4:16 PM

For the really hard break-ups, I tend to go with a nice evening viewing of the classics of Bette Davis psychobiddy films: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, The Nanny, and The Anniversary. That way, I have no desire to pursue a relationship for a while because look what she could have turned into later in life. A sense of overwhelming relief replaces a tragic sense of despair and life goes on.

Posted by: Robert at February 17, 2009 4:24 PM

Well, if it makes you feel any better, if you've got a history and then you're single for a long time, it makes you feel that much older (and doomed 'n shit) as the time since increases. Then if something happens....and then stops...now your clock's been reset and you're older than you were the last time.

Posted by: Jay at February 17, 2009 4:27 PM

It must be all the girly hormones in my system paired with a recent breakup, but your review of Eternal Sunshine made me sniffle a little.

Posted by: Anna at February 17, 2009 4:32 PM

I'm going to have to agree with Genny. After my last ex broke it off with me for someone who was the exact opposite of everything he claimed to love about me, I turned to films with blood baths. Nothing is more satisfying than imagining your ex having his limbs torn off.

And now I'm off to watch Kill Bill again...

Posted by: Trouble at February 17, 2009 5:00 PM

Macafee, that depends, what did you have in mind?

And dammitjanet, his name was not Max, but if you saying that is an indication that other intelligent people have fallen for the "well, maybe they really mean it this time despite the fact that they were a selfish non-commital asshat last time" bullshit, I feel better.

Posted by: Genny (also Rusty) at February 17, 2009 5:09 PM

I always watch High Fidelity and Swingers right after a break up. On ecomment, Rob brings pepperoni to downtrodden Mike, not bologna. My best friend and I still bring the O.J. and pepperoni every time (depending on who just got dumped).

Posted by: Reding at February 17, 2009 5:38 PM

YES! Hooray for the Eternal Sunshine Love! Although I agree with Genny. Once you're done being all weepy and such, I tend to move on to violence. Once the numbness sets in, throw on some porn until you feel human again. Don't question my methods, it's how I handle heartbreak: Cry, Bleed, Cum. Either way, I usually need a kleenex.

Posted by: Jeremy Feist at February 17, 2009 6:18 PM

best list ever. I don't own all of these, and with the amount of heartbreak I witness, you think I would.

Posted by: soto at February 17, 2009 6:30 PM

All of the Jason movies. Nothing makes me feel a little better about my life like watching those sluts get hacked to bits. Maybe if you didn't want to fuck Rick in the woods you would have lived, Megan!

/mostly kidding

Posted by: JakesAlterEgo at February 17, 2009 6:42 PM

Mike R. -

Thomas Crowne Affair for me, too. Why? Because, as a woman who has been recently dumped, who better to try and turn yourself into than cold, stylish, bitchy, seethingly sexual Midwestern Ex-Duchess Art World Bounty Hunter Renee Russo? The crush I get on her everytime I watch that film makes me forget why I even gave the time of day to ole What'sHisStinkin'Face anyway.

Even if the durn make-up artist aged her like 50 years in the flick.

Posted by: Sweetie Dahling at February 17, 2009 6:42 PM

"Charlie, you bitch, let's work it out!"

-- quoted way too many times.

Posted by: Fredo at February 17, 2009 6:42 PM

SPOT ON!! all the reviews ...'CEPT for "Swingers" Favreu's character was: A FUCKING ...CREEPY.. LOSER.


nuff said.

Posted by: BarbadoSlim at February 17, 2009 7:18 PM

I have two favorite breakup movies. For the angry, "I hate love" period of time following a break-up there is Closer. Its horrible, and the characters are wretched to each other and it alway just fits that mindset of mine perfectly.
Then there is my "If Lucy Fell" choice. The movie that I know is awful, and that I should hate. It is cheesy and contrived, but it was the movie I watched countless times after a breakup in college that was so bad I moved to another country for a year: "Under the Tuscan Sun." I found the scenery and storyline of a woman who found her whole life shattered and deciding to start over very reassuring.
Oh, actually I just thought of one more: the version of Pride and Prejudice with Colin Firth. It is like comfort food on film.

Posted by: ami at February 17, 2009 7:18 PM

stipe42 - it took me SO LONG to figure out why Gaius Baltar looked so familiar.

ami - Bridget Jones agrees with you, P&P is what her friends play for her when she's freaking out. That movie is total comfort food.

Posted by: Anne (in Reno) at February 17, 2009 7:45 PM

Well, if it makes you feel any better, if you've got a history and then you're single for a long time, it makes you feel that much older (and doomed 'n shit) as the time since increases. Then if something happens....and then stops...now your clock's been reset and you're older than you were the last time.

Thanks, Jay. Now I want to kill myself because I'm an ancient wretch.

Closer is probably my ultimate breakup movie (I think I watched it about a dozen times in the first six weeks after my ex and I split up) - nothing can beat Natalie Portman's quiet, definitive "I don't love you anymore. Goodbye." Who doesn't want to brush off an ex like that?

Posted by: Nicole at February 17, 2009 7:47 PM

I'm still older than you FIST BUMP!

Posted by: Jay at February 17, 2009 8:13 PM

Anytime anyone fist bumps on TV now, I take a shot, and then yell "TERRORIST FIST JAB!!!" and run and fist bump Mrs. stipe42.

Posted by: stipe42 at February 17, 2009 8:42 PM

Great write-up Ranylt and great poem selection, Ted.

Posted by: Jackseppelin at February 17, 2009 8:50 PM

Forget the fist bump. I'm going to start chest bumping people like a football player. How long before I get beat up or molested?

Posted by: Nicole at February 17, 2009 9:29 PM

Done.

Posted by: admin at February 17, 2009 9:33 PM

The molestation I mean. I ain't no Chris Brown.

Re: breakup movies

Violence and psychological thrillers always did it for me. Silence of the Lambs was always a favorite.

I wonder what my therapist would say about that? Probably that it's bad. Good thing I don't have one.

*Cues up Good-bye Horses*

Posted by: admin at February 17, 2009 9:40 PM

One of my all-time favorites lines is when Kathleen Turner finds Michael Douglas up on the stove and pissing in the pot of stuff she's making for her big dinner party.

Her: "I would never do a thing like that to you!"

Him: "You're not equip AGGGGGGGGHHHHH! AGGGGGGGGGHHH! MY EYES! HORSE FACE! HOOOOOORSE FAAAAAACE!

Jeeeezum, you people need to put some damn WARNING! DANGER AHEAD! signs on posts with SJP's picture.

Or do you mopes just enjoy being cruel? I'll bet you saw the horns off unicorns, too.

Posted by: bucdaddy at February 17, 2009 9:52 PM

Hedwig and the Angry Inch. Yes, really. Shut up, it's heartbreaking in eleven thousand ways.

And it's got all the break-up emotions played out: anger, disappointment, vengeance, betrayal, desperation, loneliness, resentment, and that awful, "Why wasn't I good enough?" self-doubt.

And it ends with just a little bit of hope that once you get through it, life really will get better.

Posted by: Wednesday at February 17, 2009 9:56 PM

I've never seen (nor felt the inclination to) Bridget Jones's Diary, but that line in the summary ("Oh yes they fucking do") is so sexy that now I might watch it. But I don't want to tell anyone I know that I'm going to watch it.
But Dancer in the Dark? Seriously? That would just put my ass in the bell jar, breakup or not. Let's just complete the whole thing and watch the end of Old Yeller or go read Where the Red Fern Grows.

So off topic: there's a Lifetime Movie remake of Sybil??? What the FUCK?!?

Posted by: Sharon at February 17, 2009 10:08 PM

Even more off topic. I'm about to start waving my cane at Facebook. God damn technology.

Posted by: admin at February 17, 2009 10:52 PM

I wish I hadn't bought you dinner right before you dumped me on your front porch.
I need to learn how to sing in Japanese.
Oh, and I've only seen two of these movies, so I can't really say whether or not it's a good list.

Posted by: Quincy at February 17, 2009 10:56 PM

Jerce I like the way you deal. I've been coupled for nearly two decades now, but if anything were to happen to that coupling (by way of breakup, NOT death!), I can see myself spending WEEKS doing all the things I avoid doing now because I know they bug him (out of fairness: he also avoids doing things that bug me). I'd watch The Office nonstop (he hates it). I'd leave every light in the house on. Ban The History Channel from my house. Eat Chunky Monkey straight out of the container, while naked, and then grab my middle and yell "I'M FAT AND IT'S AWESOME!!!!"

I'd also drink all his 15 year old single malt scotch. ALL of it.

Ah. Oh and in the DVD player would be both episodes of Kill Bill. (His name is Bill.)

Awesome huh?

Posted by: Anastasia Beaverhausen at February 18, 2009 1:09 AM

I enjoyed Four Weddings and a Funeral...but you are all right about Andie McDowell. Just the delivery of the last line "Oh, it's raining, I hadn't noticed" makes me laugh out loud every time I see it. I will rewind it at least twice.

As for the other characters, John Hannah was a cool motherfucker. He's the reason I watched Sliding Doors, though, so he owes me 8 bucks.

Posted by: Rubble44 at February 18, 2009 4:39 AM

Paris Texas

Posted by: Joanna at February 18, 2009 7:35 AM

Genny oh, believe me, I have fallen for it WAAAY to many times. Mine WAS Max, for 13 years of head games, moving out during the day while I was at work without saying a word to me, running away for a week, then coming back and promising the moon, then going thru the same thing all over again several times. Now, come on, if you LIVE with someone for 13 years don't you think just ONCE you would change your address from your mom and dad's to the house you share with your significant other? Jeebus crispy Christus! Lots more than that, but once he moved out last year for the LAST time, again, while I was at work, with no word, I was DONE!!! After that, I went thru a pretty heavy Tim Burton phase...."Sweeney Todd" and "Edward Scissorhands" were especially gratifying....

And, Siege Oh, if ONLY a real actress had been cast in "4 Weddings and a Funeral." But, who? I'm coming up blank here...

Posted by: dammitjanet at February 18, 2009 8:23 AM

Julia Roberts dammitjanet?

[sarc]I have found that a movie's enjoyability is directly proportional to both the amount of and the resembelance to equines.

See also SaTC[/sarc]

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 8:40 AM

admin

bwhahahahahahaha!!

Yes, SJP would have also been wondermous!!!
[/HUGE sarc]

Perhaps, Madonna, or Rosie O'Donnell?

Posted by: dammitjanet at February 18, 2009 8:53 AM

Mini Comment Diversion.. has breakup songs been done? Like the ones that you listen to obsessively over and over after you've been dumped?

Posted by: legib at February 18, 2009 8:57 AM

Perhaps, Madonna, or Rosie O'Donnell?

I said equines dammitjanet, not Dugongs or the mummified remains of King Tutankhamun.

Now I'm going to have nightmares.

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 9:16 AM

Oh, god, sorry admin I equate equines with those of equine girth and capable of taking on equines in....other capacities. That's why those 2 came to mind.

Although, I DO like Dugongs!

Posted by: dammitjanet at February 18, 2009 9:18 AM

My apologies. I'm superficial and immediately relate any animal comparison to physical attributes. Your comparisons are apt, however, I feel that Ms. O'Donnell is far more bovine than equine. Horses are pretty and muscular, but perhaps a fat donkey could apply. They even sound alike.

As for Madonna.... yeah it doesn't really need to be said.

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 9:35 AM

Eat Chunky Monkey straight out of the container, while naked, and then grab my middle and yell "I'M FAT AND IT'S AWESOME!!!!"

And this is why Anastasia Beaverhausen is my hero. (Although I'd probably go with Phish Food.)

Posted by: Anna von Beaverplatz at February 18, 2009 9:56 AM

one time I got royally dumped I went to my friends and and they wisely put on Basic Instinct, it felt so comfy and reassuring I felt at sleep on the couch.

Posted by: rio at February 18, 2009 10:41 AM

Mini Comment Diversion.. has breakup songs been done? Like the ones that you listen to obsessively over and over after you've been dumped?

Posted by: legib at February 18, 2009 8:57 AM
---
Discussion begins and ends with "The Breakup Song (They Don't Write 'Em Like That Anymore"), by Greg Kihn.

Posted by: bucdaddy at February 18, 2009 11:03 AM

Even more off topic. I'm about to start waving my cane at Facebook. God damn technology.
Posted by: admin at February 17, 2009 10:52 PM

IIB, are you on our little Facebook group? And if not, why? Are we gonna' have to break up *again*?

Anastasia Beaverhausen, I think we may actually be the same person! My last break-up, in addition to watching idiotic VH-1 shows (hi, Melody!) that he hated, I ate Ben & Jerry's straight out of the container, in my crappy long, ripped t-shirt (that I NEVER would have worn around him) and after every bite I said aloud, "YES, I AM gonna' have more. Suck it!"

It felt gooooooooooood!

Posted by: Lainey at February 18, 2009 11:38 AM

IIB, are you on our little Facebook group? And if not, why? Are we gonna' have to break up *again*?

Yes I am, and if I could figure out that fuckery I would gladly give out free hand/face jobs.

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 11:44 AM

What kind of fuckery are you talking about, specifically? If I can help, please let me know. 'Cause I'm a giver...

Posted by: Lainey at February 18, 2009 12:07 PM

Wait... what?! Admin's in the facebook group?

Looks like we've got a mystery to solve, gang!

Posted by: Anna von Beaverplatz at February 18, 2009 12:19 PM

Who the fuck puts Ben & Jerry's in a bowl? It's a single serving!

Posted by: Jay at February 18, 2009 12:24 PM

Don't worry IIG, it's like my naughty bits when I was 11. If I play with it enough, I'll eventually figure out how it works.

Who the fuck puts Ben & Jerry's in a bowl? It's a single serving!

Skinny, vapid, self torturing people Jay. We hate them.

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 12:33 PM

Hey! I'm not skinny, vapid, or self torturing! I put B&J in a bowl when I want hot fudge and cherries on it. I don't like to compromise the integrity of the container or infect the remainder of the ice cream.

Posted by: Anna von Beaverplatz at February 18, 2009 1:02 PM

Sorry AvB, forgot the [sarc] font. But Jay did say it is a single serving.

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 1:14 PM

"infect the remainder of the ice cream." - I don't even know what that means. If there's a "remainder", AvB you're doing it wrong.

IIB, I hope you finger it out quickly. I feel that the other Pajiladies (and of course, *I*) would like you to be available to us 24/7 on the Facespace. We need fresh mens. Jay and Shadows (where the hell IS he, anyway) are likely bored with our insatiable umm, insatiableness.

Posted by: Lainey at February 18, 2009 1:17 PM

I'll fire off a request this P.M. it's under my actual name so....let the stalking begin!

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 1:29 PM

Yes, fresh meat! I mean, men! Fresh men! Yes, that's what I meant.

Here's the thing with the ice cream: If I'm eating it for dinner, then of course I'm not even going to bother, because why dirty up a bowl when I'm gonna suck down the whole thing anyway? But sometimes, I just want a little ice cream snack. In that case, I'm only going to eat half of the container, and I don't want to go back in later and find the cardboard all mushy from hot fudge, or traces of cherry juice in there. Especially if I'm not in a cherry mood. Rare, but it does happen.

Plus, I'm kind of lactose intolerant. It plays hell with me guts.

Posted by: Anna von Beaverplatz at February 18, 2009 1:50 PM

You're in for it, admin, if you venture through the Pajiban Facebook looking glass. The ladies are unquenchable. It'll at least allow me a breather.

Posted by: branded at February 18, 2009 2:15 PM

Nay, branded, I have the advantage of ignorance and get off my lawnishness.

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 2:30 PM

I feel like you're hugging me when I read about "eternal sunshine..."
The best thing for Michel Gondry, too (PERIOD)

Posted by: mario at February 18, 2009 4:16 PM

christ, I can't even read that poem without sniffling.

Posted by: Stella at February 18, 2009 5:35 PM

OK so as far as that ingnorance claim, why come I cannot post on Pajiba's FB wall? I know I'm a little slow, but shit!

Posted by: admin at February 18, 2009 7:05 PM

Shopgirl does the trick for me every time I think about the one who tore out my heart and stepped on it with her stilleto heel.

Posted by: Peyton Caldrich at February 18, 2009 7:58 PM

I am so excitting about this! You moviegoers can check more related information at --Richromances.com-- where hollywood celebrities are looking for true love. It's a site for beautiful people!

Posted by: Lawre nce at February 20, 2009 12:11 AM

Great list except for the shitstorm that is Bridget Jones' Diary. One of the worst lumps of shit I've ever had to sit through there...ughhh

Posted by: Vomiting. at February 20, 2009 12:34 PM

Closer...of course...

I have just been dumped for the first time by the first person i ever loved. It'd be great if I didn't keep bursting into tears and compromising the ice maiden veneer I keep unsuccessfully trying to stun him with.

Bridget Jones's diary is awesome shite. Terrible but very good simultaneously. I think, anyway.

Posted by: Stevie at April 5, 2009 10:54 AM