Serving Sara (2002)
Joe Tyler, a process server, is a week late serving a Mafia kingpin known as Fat Charlie with a summons to appear as a witness in court. Joe's abrasive boss Ray ridicules him while complimenting Joe's rival, Tony, for serving multiple summonses in record time. Willing to give Joe one last shot, Ray gives him an assignment to serve British socialite Sara Moore with divorce papers from her husband, Gordon, who is at his ranch in Texas with his mistress, Kate, while Sara is vacationing in upstate New York.
Serving Sara (2002)
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While Joe contemplates his lost fortune and budding affection for Sara, he notices Tony's watch in the picture Tony took of him serving Sara, and calls Ray to inform him that Tony forgot to set his watch to Central Time Zone, so that the papers do not take effect until 7:04 pm Central Time. With mere minutes until they both lose a fortune, Joe and Sara trail Gordon to a monster truck rally. They evade both Gordon's bodyguard and Tony, and with seconds to spare, Sara knocks Gordon out by dropping a six-pack of beer on his head. Joe serves him under New York law and Gordon takes the papers. Tony and the bodyguard are carried out of the stadium on stretchers (due to Tony accidentally running over Gordon) and then attempt to fight one another. The final scene shows Joe and Sara at Joe's vineyard, where they taste-test a bottle of Joe's first vintage before going inside to have sex.
When Sara is served divorce papers while she is in New York, she is stunned. Not about to lose the fortune she amassed with her self-serving Texan husband, she makes an offer to her process server, Joe, that sets them off on a wild trip across the country.
Perry is Joe Tyler, a service processor who has a flustered, jive-talking black boss (Cedric the Entertainer) and an idiotic Italian intra-office archrival Tony (Vincent "Big Pussy" Pastore). Given the task of serving divorce papers to the titular Sara (Elizabeth Hurley), the smart-alecky Joe (imagine his "Chandler" character from "Friends" magnified, bitter, and without comic timing) is convinced to "flip the card" and serve Sara's husband (an utterly wasted Bruce Campbell) instead for the tidy sum of one million dollars. The reasoning for this tomfoolery has something to do with Draconian divorce laws in the state of Texas--and, indeed, Texas takes a great deal of flack in this film, along with fat kids, women, and various ethnicities. It's one thing to take on socially mandated concepts of correctness, it's another altogether to take badly-aimed cheap shots.
Serving Sara (2002), the quirky romantic comedy from director Reginald Hudlin, combines a messy divorce, a battle for money made on a Texas cattle farm, and a messenger who must deliver the divorce papers. In a strange twist of fate, the messenger (Matthew Perry) steals the heart of the woman to whom he delivers the divorce papers (Elizabeth Hurley), and both must contend with the unpleasant ex-husband (Bruce Campbell).
Kathy and Paul begin serving the lunches. As Kathy takes out the first tray, I ask her about the soft sounds of nature I hear coming from one of the rooms. The meditative recordings of a waterfall, ocean, and the songs of birds, she explains, are from a tape. The daughter of a comatose patient hopes the sounds comfort him during those times no one from the family can be with him.
I'm Dan Comden. When not serving as the head technical nerd for DO-IT, I manage the Adaptive Technology Lab at the University of Washington. I have a wife, Louise, who is a pediatric intensive care nurse, and two sons, Fritz and Zane. Apart from work and family, any spare time is spent working with my search and rescue dogs. danc@u.washington.edu
The Library has also expanded in one area where more physical space is not required-programs. These diversified and drew increased registration in 2002-03. Edgar Allan Poe first delivered a lecture at the Library in 1848 and in October 2002 returned, played by actor Norman George, to read "The Cask of Amontillado" and other works. This was the first staged presentation in the Members' Room, featuring a movable platform constructed for the occasion, lighting and music effects, and the appropriate serving of the title sherry, an imaginative contribution from Christopher Gray.
Serve as a Judge for the 2019 Arlyn Miner Moot Court The Arlyn Miner First-Year Moot Court Program will take place on April 8-10 and April 15-17. All JD students spend second semester of their first year writing and revising complex, multi-issue briefs, which they argue before a panel of alumni and faculty judges. We look forward each year to having our distinguished alumni act as judges for the Program, and hope this year you will take the opportunity to participate and meet our students. If you would like to judge, please register here. If you would like more information about the Program or about serving as an alumni judge, please contact Sonali Munshi. Interview with Judge Marvin Aspen: A Judge Who Shaped the Court, the City, & the NationIn the bicentennial year of the Northern District of Illinois, the Court will host a Judicial Oral History Project to interview history-makers who have left an indelible mark on the legal system. There is no better way to launch the project than with Judge Marvin E. Aspen (JD '58), who served as the Chief Judge from 1995 to 2002 and is completing his fourth decade of service on the Court. The interview will be moderated by three of his former law clerks, whom he now counts as colleagues: Judges Edmond E. Chang (JD '94), Jeffrey T. Gilbert (JD '80), and Sidney I. Schenkier (JD '79). The event will take place on Wednesday, February 27 at 3pm at the Dirksen Courthouse. RSVPs requested (but not required) to ILND_RSVP@ilnd.uscourts.gov. More...Faculty in the News Political Messaging in the Age of Deeply Partisan PoliticsJason DeSanto, WTTW, February 6 041b061a72