That thread doesn't seem of much use, just a bunch of people arguing subjective criteria (and probably excusing their own plainness).
Thought it was great. Right from the start, David is sitting watching TV in his crummy apartment. She rings the door, and he doesn't even recognize his own luggage which she is returning. He was complacent in the relationship and doesn't like her decision to move out ("so, two years and we're back to dating?") and asks her "are we still having sex?"
WHAT?!?!! And in the second act, David's old man Woody shows exactly where this clueless and selfish complacency was handed down from. Woody got married because his wife wanted to. His wife wasn't really a kind and supportive person, just a person who wanted what she wanted (like David's g/f, "break up, get married, just do something!"). Woody wasn't really ambitious, not aggressive, like the milquetoast David explaining the details of sound equipment instead of really making money and moving product. Woody was a good mechanic, but sold his 1/2 of the biz for $800.
David didn't really miss his g/f, he might have missed having some companionship and sex but she was certainly nothing special in any way. Unfortunately, neither was David. Anyway, this sure beat the g/f that left Vince Vaughn's "Billy" in "The Internship", a smoking hot piece of @$$ that just got fed up with aimless but charming arrested adolescence.
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