Review: Safe Haven (12A)

Author Nicholas Sparks is the king of slushy modern romance, tugging heartstrings with his emotionally wrought tales of love lost and found.
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Safe Haven

His books are a perfect fit for Hollywood and thus far, seven of his heart-tugging tomes have been adapted for the big screen, beginning in 1999 with Message In A Bottle starring Kevin Costner and Robin Wright. More recently, Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams set hearts aflutter in The Notebook.

Safe Haven adds a touch of suspense to the usual gooey mix, opening with a distraught wife, Erin Tierney (Julianne Hough), fleeing the scene of a crime – perhaps murder, perhaps self-defence.

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The terrified spouse seeks refuge with a kind neighbour, Mrs Feldman (Irene Ziegler).

She helps Erin to change her hair colour before the wife heads to the bus station with detective Kevin Tierney (David Lyons) in hot pursuit.

In one of the film’s best scenes, Erin boards a bus bounds for Atlanta and narrowly avoids capture.

She travels far away from her troubled past and hopes to throw the cops off her scent by alighting early in the quaint fishing community of Southport, North Carolina.

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In this picture-postcard 
idyll, Erin rechristens herself Katie Feldman and lands a job as a waitress at the local seafood restaurant.

Unfortunately, Tierney won’t rest until he has found Erin, and against the advice of his superiors, he bends the law to search for clues to her whereabouts.

Drawing obvious comparisons with the 1991 Julia Roberts pot-boiler Sleeping With The Enemy, Safe Haven is undemanding fluff that doesn’t stray once from a well-trodden narrative path.

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