Losing Focus

  What’s the story? asks the advertising for “Morning Glory.â€� And that’s indeed the question for this movie, its director, Roger Mitchell, and its writer, Aileen Brosh McKenna.

   Ostensibly the film about how recently fired TV producer Becky Fuller (Rachel McAdams, in a hyper-kinetic performance) is hired to rejuvenate the lowest-rated network morning show, “Daybreak.â€�

   Along the way she must  deal with a collection of disheartened staffers, face the pessimism of an aging morning-show diva, Colleen Peck (a much underused Diane Keaton), use contractual clauses to force a self-proclaimed icon of “hard news,â€� Mike Pomeroy (Harrison Ford, pompous and gravel voiced) to co-anchor the show, and have an on-again, off-again romance with dreamboat news magazine producer Adam Bennett (the super-hunky Patrick Wilson, whose acting skills — do you

remember “Little Children� with Kate Winslet? — are never needed to play this blond cypher).

   This could have been the basis of an interesting movie. Not with the anger of “Networkâ€� nor the poignancy of “Network News,â€� but involving and comic.

   What does happen to aging anchors?  

   Do they become parodies of themselves, as Dan Rather did? Do they have to broadcast “fluff,â€� a word much used —  and eventually to touching effect here?

   But the British Mitchell (“Enduring Love,â€� “Notting Hillâ€�) and McKenna (“The Devil Wears Pradaâ€�) never develop any of their ideas. The first two-thirds of the film ricochets all over the place until suddenly Becky’s boss, Jerry Barnes (Jeff Goldblum, without — surprise — his usual tics) tells her the show is going to be canceled. When she wins his agreement that if the ratings rise, the show will survive, both she and the film finally become truly funny and even touching.

   The movie is full of gaps and gaffs, especially for anyone who knows New York City. One minute “Daybreakâ€� seems to be broadcast from the GM Building, the next from the Grace Building on 42nd Street. When Becky rushes from Brooklyn to the studio at sunrise, she — who wouldn’t — walks and runs over the Brooklyn Bridge. When she pursues her boss, she jogs in high heels — who wouldn’t — along with him in Central Park. And when she interviews for a job on “Today,â€� she wears — who wouldn’t — a diaphanous, low-cut summer dress that billows and floats around her when she — who wouldn’t — runs back across Manhattan to “Daybreak.â€�

   “Morning Gloryâ€� isn’t terrible. If you don’t want to see the bleak horrors of “Hornets Nestâ€� nor the coming fantasy of “Harry Potter,â€� it’s a perfectly pleasant way to pass two hours. But be prepared, the execrable score — R&B, pop, oldies with no focus — is very loud.

     “Morning Gloryâ€� is playing at The Movie House in  Millerton, NY, and Torrington’s Cinerom. It will open at the Triplex in Great Barrington, MA, Nov. 19.  The film is rated PG-13 for sexual content and strong language, why I can’t fathom, since it has no real sex and little “strongâ€� language. And I doubt many teens would be caught dead seeing it anyway.

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