For the first time that I can remember, there is no late night talk show on CBS. With the cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert , an era has come to an end –not just the existence of the Late Show brand, which began in 1993 with David Letterman, but the era of competing talk shows itself. For a couple decades there, the talk show format was strong enough that it could support several variations with distinctions based on the character and personality of its host and their writers. But a few years back James Corden’s incarnation of The Late Late Show ended and CBS chose not to continue the franchise (leaving Late Night with Seth Meyers unopposed in its timeslot). And now that they’ve forced the end of The Late Show –the most popular of the recent talk show iterations- with Jimmy Kimmel Live also likely to wrap up in the near future, NBC’s pair of shows will be the only ones standing –as they had been in the 1980s though without anywhere near the cultural footprint...
In the 1993 Nora Ephron movie Sleepless in Seattle , there is a rather cheeky scene in which Meg Ryan cries while watching An Affair to Remember -the film which Sleepless in Seattle is a loose remake of. Likewise in Leah McKendrick’s Voicemails for Isabelle there are a handful of conscious references made towards Meg Ryan by a protagonist comparing herself to one of Ryan’s rom-com characters -Tom Hanks is also name-dropped. This thematic quote is not accidental. McKendrick’s movie very much endeavours to be a modern take on a Nora Ephron rom-com. In the vein of Sleepless in Seattle and You’ve Got Mail it incorporates a modern messaging plot device as a means of bringing together its romantic leads, one taking the initiative from a place of anonymity only for the truth to inevitably come out, yet their romantic connection withstanding the situation regardless. One of those classic rom-com premises that only happen in the movies. Of course, for several reasons, McKendric...