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This Is Me…Now: A Love Story review: JLo tells a powerful tale

Jennifer Lopez masterfully reclaims her identity as a heroine triumphing over heartbreak in this sonically poignant journey

Film Reviews A Love Story
This Is Me…Now: A Love Story review: JLo tells a powerful tale
Jennifer Lopez in This Is Me…Now Image: Prime Video

To understand where multi-hyphenate superstar Jennifer Lopez is today, as her new film This Is Me…Now: A Love Story is about to start streaming on Prime Video, audiences need to know where she’s been. Two decades ago, Lopez suffered devastating heartache when her engagement to Oscar-winner Ben Affleck was abruptly called off. Their two-year courtship—which earned them the moniker “Bennifer” from fans and press—was heavily documented by paparazzi, and the ensuing media circus surrounding them eventually helped to sever their romantic ties.

While their relationship was forged in the fires of the cinematic dud Gigli, it birthed J.Lo’s under-heralded album This Is Me…Then, which turned out four hit singles and marked her brilliant artistic foray into dreamy R&B-style yacht pop bops. Her sonic love letter, dedicated to her Bostonian fiancée, remains a banging cultural artifact. Yet just as the album’s 20th anniversary crept close, a wonderful thing happened for Lopez, Affleck, and the rest of us who’ve waxed nostalgic for Bennifer’s hallmark era: the lovebirds rekindled their romance and finally made it to the altar. Twice.

Their reunification inspired La Lopez—ever the unapologetic romantic—to creatively reflect upon her lifelong journey, discovering the healing power of self-love within the notes and lyrics of a sequel album and accompanying music video experience, This Is Me…Now: A Love Story. She teams up with director Dave Meyers and co-writer Matt Walton (working from a story by Lopez, Meyers, and Chris Shafer) to re-imagine her lovelorn adventures as a fantastical, over-the-top genre mashup. The result is a genuinely moving, absurdist autobiography of a dynamic persona in flux that’s as campy as it is charming, ridiculous as it is rapturous, preposterous as it is profound.

The filmmakers manifest an overarching story in which Lopez, as the Artist, is engaged in intensive psychotherapy sessions led by her Therapist (Fat Joe) that connect music video vignettes. A tribunal of celestial signs—the Zodiacal Counsel, which contains a cavalcade of celebrities, most notably Jane Fonda as a resolute Sagittarius, Post Malone as a flirty Leo, and Keke Palmer as a sassy Scorpio—also weighs in from the heavens with their vain attempts to align Lopez’s life. She also has a group of friends, who despite titles like “The Cynic,” “The Fighter,” and “The Quiet One,” don’t establish themselves as anything but a generic monolith. And in the background of all her travesties and travails is Rex Stone (Ben Affleck in a gloriously gonzo performance under heavy prosthetics and a bad wig), a cable news talking head providing a few nuggets of wisdom. Yes, it’s okay to giggle. Silliness acts as a gateway to sincerity.

She begins by sharing the Puerto Rican myth of star-crossed lovers Alida and Taroo, a.k.a. The Legend of the Hummingbird (the officially adopted animal ally of her romantic renaissance). It’s a love she’s sought to emulate—to little avail, as her paramours have all disappointed since her one true love crashed and vanished years earlier. If our beloved “Jenny from the Block” had to psychologically disassociate to bring us this bonkers, beautifully rhapsodic odyssey, balancing personal revelations with professional breakthroughs, then we are truly the victors.

Scenarios shared with her therapeutic confidant range from surreal and metaphoric to clear-eyed. The propulsive ferocity behind these musical sequences is potent, containing varying degrees of poignancy. The upbeat, steampunk-adjacent number “Hearts and Flowers” casts her as a fearless factory worker dancing with people clad in hazmat suits as she fights to keep a mechanical heart fueled by fresh rose petals beating. “Rebound” has her and an abusive ex tethered together in a toxic tango, ending with her walking on broken glass (eat your heart out, Annie Lennox).

“Can’t Get Enough,” a peppy, sweet-hearted romcom-esque ditty in which she cheekily lampoons her trio of weddings (Dancing With The Stars’ Derek Hough noticeably playing the part of ex-hubs/dancer Chris Judd), and “Broken Like Me,” a gutting, introspective ballad set in a self-help group, ditch the previous songs’ heavy CGI for a practical visual aesthetic and grounded emotional resonance. Luther Brown, Parris Goebel, Tessandra Chavez, and Sienna Lalau’s choreography earns high marks throughout, but particularly in these two immersive set pieces as the dancers’ synchronized rhythmic movements are, respectively, joyously infectious and poetically expressive.

This Is Me…Now: A Love Story – Official Trailer | Prime Video

As Steven Spielberg did with The Fabelmans, returning to childhood to work through the complex feelings that formed his identity, Lopez does too as the architect of her own biography in the portion featuring the title track, confronted by her young self (Bella Gagliano) in her old Bronx neighborhood. That’s not to say she’s entirely self-aware. There’s a Marie Antoinette-ish correlation to be made as she sobs over The Way We Were on her custom Gucci couch in a multimillion-dollar Malibu mansion. She cries in therapy, rationalizing self-sabotaging behavior while wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the slogan “Endangered Species.” Still, she wins us back again and again with compelling empathy, as heartache is still heartache.

Lopez showcases strength and vulnerability more than ever before in this deeply personalized work of artistic bravura. She opens her heart in “Hummingbird,” a Singing In The Rain-esque pas de deux with a hummingbird on a rainy evening, and in “Midnight Trip To Vegas,” which was lyrically inspired by the steadfast sweethearts’ Sin City nuptials, but plays like she’s reveling in a fever dream combo of Burning Man, Coachella, and a P. Diddy Hamptons party. Switching up the order of the album tracks provides an engrossing storyline—though not all the songs appear to have warranted the big screen treatment. “Mad In Love With Ya,” “This Time Around,” and “Not Going Anywhere” are relegated to the end credits scroll.

This Is Me…Now: A Love Story’s heightened reality and authentic artifice will most likely connect best with J. Lo’s passionate fan base. However, anyone who clicks play (even the haters she sings about on “This Time Around”) to spend an hour in her headspace will see that she and Meyers have gifted us with a gem, filled with catchy, unabashedly sentimental songs centered on never giving up on love. It’s the perfect happy ending for a woman innovatively voicing her creative catharsis through sound and vision.

This Is Me…Now: A Love Story streams on Prime Video starting February 16

13 Comments

  • realtimothydalton-av says:

    omg this review. I’m chortlingwhat a truly ridiculous ego project. the fact that she had to self fund it is proof enough that nobody is interested in this story, nor should they be!

  • systemmastert-av says:

    Should make for a good two part movie night with Neil Breen’s I Am Here… Now.

  • coolgameguy-av says:
  • nowaitcomeback-av says:

    Is this sponsored content?

  • breadnmaters-av says:

    I’m not seeing very positive reviews for the biopic. In particular: “Billed as “a narrative-driven cinematic odyssey” (so, like a movie?), J.Lo’s love letter to romance is too glossy and bizarre to ever get to the heart of the matter.”It was also described, quite simply, as “just a commercial for her album.”Movies about real woman searching for self-affirmation are necessary, but this is a vanity piece and I don’t think Lopez’ less than significant contribution as and Artist justifies it. And I can guess where she got the idea for a song and dance piece during a self-help group encounter (Rocketman). We also see her singin’ in the rain.

  • therealmsaturn-av says:

    What is this? J Lo Derangement Syndrome? Woof.

  • bootsprite-av says:

    Is “A-” code for “this was paid for”?

  • graymangames-av says:

    There was a time not too long ago that this site would’ve been rightfully mocking pop start ego-wank like this. Now you’re writing about it like it’s a transcendent film-making experience? This sucks.

    • phonypope-av says:

      Jennifer Lopez masterfully reclaims her identity as a heroine triumphing over heartbreak in this sonically poignant journey

    • wnbso-av says:

      Pop star ego wank leads to great cult classics.

    • nowaitcomeback-av says:

      This very site just featured an article about how Ayo Edebiri did nothing wrong for callin out J-Lo’s career being a total scam. I know different authors have different opinions, but that’s a pretty big disparity.

  • milligna000-av says:

    Shame on you, Courtney Howard

  • 777byatlassound-av says:

    i’m hoping this is bat-shit funny and ridiculous, based on the trailer.

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