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Sisters Liz (Sam Simone), Lydia (Brittany Bennett) and Mary (Allison
Wick) live in a beautiful townhouse in the West Village, Manhattan, New
York, which they have inherited by their parents - but since neither of
them has a very good job, they can hardly pay for the places maintenance.
So they accept a tenant for the downstairs apartment, hedgefunds manager
Jonathan (Russell Sperberg), who seems to be a nice enough guy, but he has
a friend, George Barrow (Lee Tyler), who seems to pop into Jonathan's
apartment and thus the sisters' lives almost constantly and who can't stop
nagging about the place - which is bad enough, but worse so since he's a
young hotshot from a family of realtors who want to buy up all the
townhouses of Lower Manhattan to turn the area into a hedge funds
managers' paradise. Needless to say the sisters' place is the only one he
hasn't gotten his hands on yet. So it's war between him and the sisters,
but for him it's not only about a good business deal, he also owes a lot
of money to two mobsters (Joseph D'Onofrio, Al Linea) whom he will only
able to pay back once the girls' place is his - and the mobsters are
getting a tad impatient. So the sisters' situation is bad, and it's made
worse when they find out their checkbook of their account with the bank
that has a huge loan on it has been stolen, and the bank's planning to
re-possess the house shouldn't they be able to pay back soon. So it seems
George and the girls are stuck in a stalemate - but then one power-outaged
night, George and Liz bump into one another in Jonathan's apartment, and
they notice they might have romantic feelings for one another, stemming
from a story that has happened in their childhood. But there's also Tommy
(Jonas Barranca), who has the hots for Liz, and who desparately wants to
break up the two of them before anything can develop. Only, Tommy's bad
news in more ways than one ...
Now I won't lie to you, Townhouse Confidential is not
exactly a movie that breaks genre boundaries let alone re-invents romantic
comedy as such, and really the attitude that a woman's happiness depends
on finding Prince Charming seems a little out of date by now - but that
doesn't mean that this is a bad film as such: Sure, the overall
plot might be lacking in originality, but there are fun detaily (like a
predilection for cupcakes) that make up for this, as well as well
fleshed-out and relatable characters at the center of the story, with a
bunch of pretty hilarious caricatures on the sidelines. And that the
obligatory happy ending also includes a gay wedding sure is worth
mentioning as well. So no, not the re-invention of the wheel - but you
might like it more than you'd expect still.
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