The Third Wish Review
By Christopher Null
Maggie Malone's story, alas, is almost too cliched even to exist in the movies. One boring day at the shop (run by Betty White, pretty much the only remotely interesting part of the film), Maggie discovers an old copy of Great Expectations, and suddenly she finds herself being granted a series of wishes, courtesy of a young British guy (Sean Maguire) who says she has a secret benefactor, who apparently is loaded with cash. (Sound familiar?)
From fancy dinners to a new car (she can't even drive) to a penthouse apartment, Maggie is given loads of free stuff. Her perfect life has somehow become even more perfect. But who is this benefactor? And why is his little friend such a massive tool?
Ultimately, The Third Wish (and in my mind, that's misleading, as Maggie gets way more than three wishes) is a love story between the mismatched couple, complete with endless montages set to every Monkees tune you've ever heard. The identity of the benefactor will be revealed in the end. You won't care who it is, namely because it has nothing to do with anything that's happened up to that point.
Shelley Jensen, directing his first feature film after spending 20 years directing hundreds of sitcom episodes brings nothing much to the table here. The film comes off like an episode of Caroline in the City (which Jensen worked on), only without a laugh track. It could have used one: Mattison's script has a few zingers but most of her jokes fall flat on their face. Painfully, in some cases.
In the end, I only have one wish: For 90 minutes to be returned to me.
Where's Bea Arthur when you need her?

Facts and Figures
Year: 2005
Run time: 93 mins
In Theaters: Friday 22nd April 2005
Distributed by: Newmark/Echelon
Reviews
Contactmusic.com: 2 / 5
IMDB: 4.3 / 10
Cast & Crew
Director: Shelley Jensen
Producer: Daniela C. Cretu, Philippe Diaz, Jenna Mattison, Darla Rothman
Screenwriter: Jenna Mattison
Starring: Wu Kang-Ren as Rong Guang, Chen Yu-Cheng as Feng, Alice Tzeng as Yi Ying, Tang Guo-Zhong as Chung Hao, Cheuk Sing-Lei as Uncle Fu
Also starring: Sean Maguire, Armand Assante, Jennifer Blanc, Betty White, James Avery, Mindy Cohn