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Sparks adaptation plays it too safe

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RELATIVITY MEDIA
relativity media The formulaic "Safe Haven," starring Josh Duhamel, left, and Julianne Hough, takes no chances.

‘SAFE HAVEN’

Rated: PG-13
* *
Opens today

Review by Roger Moore
McClatchy Newspapers

The movies based on the novels of Nicholas Sparks always emphasize the simple pleasures. A quiet locale, a leisurely stroll down the beach, a romance that doesn’t begin in a bar and end in bed that same night.

Those simple pleasures are in the forefront of "Safe Haven," another sweetly treacly tale from the "beach book" author who gave us "The Notebook," "Dear John" and "The Last Song." There’s another beach town — sleepy, bucolic Southport, N.C. — another pair of lovers, each with his (Josh Duhamel) or her (Julianne Hough) "big secrets."

The girl, Katie, is on the run from Boston, and the locals, especially handsome widowed shopkeeper Alex, take an interest and try to make her fresh start work out. But Katie’s reading this helpfulness — he gives her an old bike to get to her job at the seafood joint — Yankee-wrong.

"If you’re goin’ to live South of the Mason-Dixon line, honey, people GIVE you stuff."

Katie learns to spearfish flounder, to cope with critters in the shack she rents in the woods and to accept those unrequested gifts.

About the beach: "Take a lot of pictures. You’ll only regret the ones you didn’t take."

There’s an overly nosy/ overly friendly neighbor (Cobie Smulders) and a twinkly old uncle (Red West) to prod Alex into approaching the pretty new waitress in town.

Director Lasse Hallstrom ("Salmon Fishing in the Yemen," "Chocolat") goes to some pains to hide each character’s secrets. The Boston cop (David Lyons) obsessed with tracking down Katie uses more police work than common sense to find her, and we glimpse the late wife’s attic office that Alex rarely visits.

Hallstrom and his screenwriters may be stuck with Sparks’ formula, but they take advantage of the geography, the leads and a couple of homespun supporting players — Robin Mullins is a wonderfully folksy owner of the seaside seafood shack.

The offhandedly charming Duhamel is more seasoned and better at this sort of laid-back slow-burn love than the still-green Hough, who seems too young for somebody with this much baggage. She is never more than adequate.

It’s a movie for people who nod their heads at the revelation that "Life is full of second chances." There’s tragedy and heartbreak, in the past and possibly in the future, and a story that involves no heavy lifting and few surprises, and is so "safe" there’s nothing anybody would consider "edgy."

From "Message in a Bottle" to "Nights in Rodanthe," that’s a formula that’s made Sparks rich. But some of us want more from our big-screen romances, especially a film released on Valentine’s Day.

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