Second Act Review

Second Act
Maya (Jennifer Lopez) is a long-suffering megastore assistant manager whose hands-on experience is undermined by her lack of education, losing her a big promotion. Overhearing the news, Maya’s godson secretly revamps her online identity, landing her a job at a high-end consumer products company in Manhattan.

by Beth Webb |
Published on
Release Date:

25 Jan 2019

Running Time:

103 minutes

Certificate:

12A

Original Title:

Second Act

Jennifer Lopez returns to the block for Second Act, a rags-to-riches romp which, through a set of delightful twists, ditches the ruthless career-comedy shtick for a refreshingly kind-hearted caper.

Second Act

As Maya, Lopez proves she can be both a resourceful working-class woman and a convincing, immaculately dressed corporate bigwig. She embraces her background, injecting her street-savvy ways into an industry reliant on Silicon Valley shorthand and quickly earning the respect of her CEO, who pits her against his daughter Zoe (Vanessa Hudgens) to see who can design a better organic skincare line.

Lopez utilises her romcom background to excellent effect.

Female rivalries in film feel somewhat outdated today and Second Act has caught on, wasting no time in evolving Maya and Zoe’s relationship from competing colleagues into something sweeter. The twists in the story from here are doused in sentiment, but use Maya’s troubled past to guide Second Act away from a formulaic battle to the finish line.

The supporting cast get only snatches of screen time but complement the story nicely; Judd Apatow alumnus Charlyne Yi brings the comedy as Maya’s vertigo-suffering aid (they work in a skyscraper) and Milo Ventimiglia, the moustachioed dad from This Is Us, channels that same wholesome energy into Maya’s beau, Trey.

The result is heaps of fun. Lopez utilises her romcom timing and musical background to excellent effect. Under the froth, however, lies a shining example of what happens when, in the right hands, a tired genre gets its own modern makeover.

If you’re not fond of Lopez’s soapier films (hello, Maid In Manhattan), this might make for queasy watching, but stick with Second Act for its smart reframing of a city Cinderella story that retains its sense of humour.
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