There's a wonderful scene in which Clooney, Fermiga and Kendrick discuss relationships and commitment — the dynamic
between a yuppie and the apparently content corporate high - fliers she pertains to one day be is very engaging.
Romantically she jumps back and forth
between yuppie Ben Stiller and slacker Ethan Hawke, while her best friends Janeane Garofalo and Steve Zahn provide comic relief and go through their own crises — including a brush with HIV.
Not exact matches
Clever sleuthing finds a connection
between a virus associated with cancer and the mysterious «
yuppie flu.»
Between that dream and reality lie a houseful of cranky relatives, a mean boss from work,
yuppie neighbors, and our ever favorite Cousin Eddie (Randy Quaid).
Little moments earn smiles: the parking - lot meeting
between Annika and Megan; the latter's attempts to explain to her budding -
yuppie friend (Ellie Kemper) that twisting the nipples of a giant, plastic Buddha is a joke about nipples, not a joke about Buddha; and the scene in which Rockwell's character, acting as a surrogate for the audience, demands answers from the stranger sleeping on the floor of his daughter's bedroom.
He lives the
yuppie life with wife Audrey (Alfre Woodard, Mumford, Love and Basketball), although their marriage is strained because of issues
between them and the fact that their older son is not home.