Critics have blasted Jennifer Lopez’s new film This In Me… Now: A Love Story as a ‘self-financed and resolutely, painfully autobiographical’ vanity project.
The singer, 54, shelled out a staggering $20million ($16million) to fund the film which was released on Amazon Prime Video on Friday.
The movie is part of a three-way project about her famous search for love and how she ultimately found it with her husband Ben Affleck, 51.
Jennifer will also release an album This Is Me … Now, which is a follow-up to her 2003 album This Is Me … Then which was inspired by and dedicated to Ben.
There is also documentary chronicling the making of the film and record, The Greatest Love Story Never Told.
Critics have blasted Jennifer Lopez’s new film This In Me… Now: A Love Story as a ‘self-financed and resolutely, painfully autobiographical’ vanity project
The singer, 54, shelled out a staggering £16million ($20million) to fund the film which was released on Amazon Prime Video on Friday
The pair ended their engagement a year after the record’s release, but they got back together almost two decades later and married in 2022.
And while Jennifer gained recognition for her role in the 2019 film Hustlers, which she also produced, critics have been less favourable about her latest project in which she stars and sings songs from her new album.
The actress plays Atia Boggs with the script written by her husband Ben and Dave Meyers (who also directed it). Ben will play Rex Stone.
Ratings were scored just two out of five stars by the The Standard, The Guardian and The Independent with many tearing into the ‘truly chaotic’ plot, while others slammed the star for spending so much on what they thought was essentially ‘a vanity project’.
El Hunt for The Standard wrote: ‘Before diving into the pulsing metal heart of J-Lo’s new fantastically-styled love story This Is Me… Now I should probably issue a quick disclaimer: even though this is among the most unhinged pieces of film imaginable, I completely understand what on earth possessed her to make it.
‘To be honest, if I happened to have a spare $20 million kicking about, the temptation to make an incredibly extra, metaphor-riddled quasi-musical about my trials and tribulations of the heart would be irresistible.
‘The problem is that it wouldn’t be a very sensible way to spend it. While proper, full-blown heartbreak hurts in a way that makes you feel like you are officially the only living person in history to ever feel this rotten – ever! – most of us have been there, done that, and got the ill-advised break-up haircut to show for it.’
The Guardian’s Benjamin Lee said while she is a ‘joy to watch’ the film feels rushed with the various themes in the film causing it to feel disordered.
He wrote: ‘This Is Me … Now: A Love Story is a lot of things. It’s part visual album, part “warts-and-all” autobiography, part animated Puerto Rican myth, part sci-fi epic, part celebrity satire and part self-help exercise.
It’s inarguably too many parts to make something that feels whole, a chaotic and rushed journey through the mind of a megastar who prefers to keep her real self in the shade.
The movie and album dropped on February 16, while the documentary will be released on February 27.
The wild project raised the eyebrows of her inner circle, who advised her against shooting the film, suggesting it may be a bad idea – but JLo went ahead and made it anyway
‘It’s not really much of anything in the end, and feels most like a stitched together collection of pre-filmed awards show bits, working best as yet more proof of Lopez’s considerable screen magnetism.
‘She’s a joy to watch, a pro at elevating something that should be beneath her, even when it has come from her own hand. If this is Lopez as she is now, willing to take a certain kind of risk, then let’s hope she’s willing to take more.’
Giving three out of five stars Empire described it as a ‘pretty audacious hour-and-a-bit.’
‘Much of the film will have you scratching your head in bafflement,’ wrote critic John Nugent.
‘Self-financed and resolutely, painfully autobiographical, This Is Me… Now: A Love Story has been accused of being a vanity project for Lopez — an accusation which feels meaningless.
‘Of course it is! You would hardly catch her doing some sort of humility project. This is a garish, frequently insane, diamond-encrusted fantasy trip into the mind of a superstar, and we should be grateful to have even limited access.’
The Telegraph gave it the most favourable review but still said it had a ‘lack of purpose or depth’.
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