NOTE: This is a reprint of my review from the Virginia Film Festival. 5 to 7 opens on April 3rd.
In French culture, "cinq a sept" literally means from 5 to 7, a time of day we here in America would generally consider to be "Happy Hour". For us it's a time to kick back and unwind with a few friends after work and down a few frosty beverages before hitting the homestead. But it has a dual meaning to those of an adulterous disposition, with the hours marking the unofficial time when such affairs are deemed acceptable, and in some cases encouraged. Victor Levin's directorial debut 5 to 7 sees itself as a fanciful, classic romance, and occasionally hits on just the right notes, but it's too cloying to be anything more than a dalliance.

Pretty hard to believe, right? The film goes to great lengths to explain why this is acceptable, but never why a stunning and sophisticated woman like Arielle would fall for someone like Brian, who has absolutely nothing going for him except some "aw shucks" charm. Rather than doing cartwheels at the extraordinarily awesome situation he's stumbled into, Brian can't wrap his head around it. Snobbishly brushing her off at first and going back into his hole to work (on that writing he's terrible at), ultimately he can't resist and leaps into the affair with both feet. In-between passionate trysts, Arielle and Brian's abundant differences, both in age (she's nearly 10 years older), culture, and life experience only drive them together rather than apart. While the boundaries of the relationship can never change, she still finds new ways to shock him, in particular when he's invited to Arielle's home for dinner. There he meets her husband and his own mistress (Olivia Thirlby), conveniently a young and attractive book editor. You can probably see where that goes. The openness of the affair throws Brian for a loop, which is nothing compared to what it does to his parents (Frank Langella and Glenn Close, both terrific here), who bicker hilariously over the morality of the whole affair.

Rating: 3 out of 5