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Today is Jul 24, 2008

St. Raphael Parish

St. Raphael Parish in Naperville plans to sponsor a Christian beginnings workshop from 9:15-11:15 a.m. May 19-30 (no class May 26). The cost is $150 per person, which includes materials. For more information 630-355-4545 ext. 112.

St. Raphael Parish

St. Raphael Parish in Naperville plans to hold "Matthew: A Gospel for Times of Transition," a one-day retreat, from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. May 31. The cost is $25 per person. For more information 630-355-4545 ext. 112.

St. Jude Parish

St. Jude Parish in Joliet plans to hold vacation Bible school June 16-20. Registration is scheduled May 17-June 2. For more information 815-725-2209.

The St. Ambrose Home School Association

The St. Ambrose Home School Association plans to co-sponsor a musical performance at 6:30 p.m. June 7 and at 3 p.m. June 8 in the Moser Performing Arts Center Auditorium at University of St. Francis in Joliet. For complete details 708-557-7070.

St. Thomas the Apostle Parish

St. Thomas the Apostle Parish in Naperville plans to host "EcoMission: Growing Our Souls and Saving Our Planet" May 31-June 12. Complete details, including a schedule of topics, are available at www.stapostle.org.

St. Jude Parish

St. Jude Parish in Joliet plans to hold vacation Bible school June 16-20. Registration is scheduled May 17-June 2. For more information 815-725-2209.

SS. Peter and Paul Parish

SS. Peter and Paul Parish in Naperville is offering the Tridentine Mass. The Latin Mass is celebrated at 5:30 p.m. Sundays. For more information 630-718-2114.

Immaculate Conception High School

The class of 1958 of Immaculate Conception High School in Elmhurst plans to hold its 50-year class reunion Oct. 3-4 at the Wyndham Drake Oakbrook Hotel. For details or to help locate alumni 630-833-2939.

Mary Queen of Heaven Parish

Mary Queen of Heaven Parish in Elmhurst plans to continue its Women in the Church/Women in the Bible speaker series.
The schedule is as follows:
Franciscan Father Benet Fonck, a renowned presenter, is slated to speak at noon Aug. 10 about St. Clare.
Dominican Sister Barbara Reid, a prominent biblical scholar, is scheduled to speak at 7 p.m. Oct. 14 about women of the New Testament.
Mary Foley, pastoral life coordinator at the Elmhurst parish, is planned to speak at 7 p.m. Nov. 4 about "Women in Ecclesial Ministry Today."
For complete details 630-279-5700.

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Dan in Real Life

Published Oct 26, 2007

NEW YORK (CNS) -- Steve Carrell may be the best reason to see "Dan in Real Life" (Touchstone/Focus), a pleasantly amusing if unremarkable comedy.

He's in top form playing Dan Burns, who is a successful family advice columnist on the verge of national syndication and the widowed father of three growing girls -- Jane (Alison Pill), Cara (Brittany Robertson) and Lilly (Marlene Lawston).

He's decided they'll all go to a family reunion at the rambling Rhode Island house of his parents Nana (Dianne Wiest) and Poppy (John Mahoney). It's a huge gathering that includes his brothers, Mitch (Dane Cook) and Clay (Norbert Leo Butz), sister Amy (Jessica Hecht), plus Clay's wife, Eileen (Amy Ryan), and their kids.

Sensing that their son needs to be shaken out of his still-grieving doldrums, Nana and Poppy shoo Dan out of the house. He drives to a bookstore where he, as they say, "meets cute" with Marie (Juliette Binoche), an empathetic and attractive woman to whom, over lunch, he pours out his life story. And of course, he finds himself falling in love, but has she?

When they part, she seems oddly evasive about giving him her number. Back at the house, he tells the family he's met the perfect woman, only to learn seconds later that she is Mitch's girlfriend and is staying at the house, too.

They keep their prior encounter a secret, to spare Mitch's feelings. And the rest of the film has Dan mooning over Marie, realizing that all the advice he dispenses in his column is doing him scant good now. How will they get together?

Director and co-writer Peter Hedges' film, for all its deficiencies -- like its too-leisurely pace -- is nonetheless likable. Remarkably, for this day and age, there are hardly any objectionable elements. The depiction of Dan's large, loving and chaotic family is another plus.

The negatives are an oblique remark by Clay suggesting that his brother relieve his sexual frustrations in a, shall we say, solitary way incompatible with church teaching, and a farcical scene where Dan and Marie are forced into the shower together (Marie presumably undressed) while a fully clothed Dan gets drenched. But he averts his eyes.

Binoche's Marie is a cipher. How many films have we seen where a couple fall in love, but circumstances (like a prior romantic entanglement) keep them apart? There's usually a strong sense of inevitable attraction that makes viewers root for them to get together. Here, Marie's true feelings are so suppressed, she seems oddly content with the superficial, womanizing Mitch. And there's little chemistry between Binoche and Carrell (the fault of the script, I think).

All in all, the basic setup seems contrived, the ostensible romance earthbound, and the formulaic script not terribly funny. But Carrell's humanely comic presence provides sufficient compensation.

The film contains mild innuendo. The USCCB Office for Film & Broadcasting classification is A-II -- adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG-13 -- parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

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Forbes is director of the Office for Film & Broadcasting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. More reviews are available online at www.usccb.org/movies.

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