Vote on this title
Click on a gene to vote or discover related titles.
Find it on:
| IMDb | |
| Rotten Tomatoes |
Serving Sara, 2002
English, Spanish
Germany, USA
Profile of Serving Sara
The mood of Serving Sara is humorous and feel good. The plot centers around a situation where nothing goes right, a love affair, and couples relations. It features grossout humor and silly humor. Serving Sara is a comedy movie. Stylistically, it has a road movie structure. In approach, it is realistic. Serving Sara is set in Texas and New York. It happens in contemporary times. Note that it includes sexual content.
Summary of Serving Sara
Fetching Sara Moore (Elizabeth Hurley) thinks that she is a happily married woman until process server Joe Tyler (Matthew Perry) shows up at her Manhattan apartment to serve her with divorce papers. Sara gives Joe a run for his money, fleeing to the Estee Lauder Salon (a nice touch for those who know Hurley as the company's representative) and dodging him all around New York City. Realizing that she stands to lose everything in the divorce to her Texan cattle-rancher husband (Bruce Campbell) if she is served first, Sara hires Joe to turn the tables and serve her husband first. As the two leave New York for Texas in pursuit of Gordon, they engage in luggage carousel hijinx, have a run-in with a bull, and find themselves at a Monster Truck rally, among other places. Of course, true love is always just around the corner as Sara and Joe spend more time together in pursuit of saving her millions. Vincent Pastore plays Joe's foil, Tony, who has been sabotaging Joe's work for months in order to impress the boss (Cedric "The Entertainer" Kyles) and become the company's star process server. SERVING SARA is directed by Reginald Hudlin (HOUSE PARTY, THE LADIES MAN).
Details
| Language: | English, Spanish |
| Country: | Germany, USA |
| Release date: | 20 August 2002 |
| Runtime: | 102 min |
Cast and Crew
as Joe Tyler
as Sara Moore
Photos
Clips

Critics Reviews
Variety
- |
- by: Robert Koehler
San Francisco Chronicle
- |
- by: Mick LaSalle
Mood:
Plot:
Genres:
Time/Period:
Place:
Humor:
Style:
Attitudes:
Flag:

