Looking over the shoulders of a couple of shiny Manhattanites vaulting obstacles on the course of true love is a rom-com staple.
So it's quite refreshing to find a movie that reduces the lovey-doviness to a montage...and heads straight for the bile-spewing break-up in lingering slo-mo.
Vaughn, who provided the story as well as taking the lead role, maintains that he's always wanted to make the "anti-romantic comedy."
Here he plays sports jock Gary, a slackerish Chicago tour guide with a lightning line in cheeky chatter and an addiction to late night TV football.
He verbally swept winsome Brooke (Aniston) off her feet at a Cubs game and now they live a life of D.I.N.K.Y bliss in a uber-desirable apartment.
However, the whole romantic edifice turns to emotional dust when a minor domestic spat over lemons escalates into all-out war.
Gary draws up the battle lines by installing a pool table and inviting a bevy of upholstered slappers round for a game of strip poker.
Brooke, secretly desperate to win him back, dates a variety of men (including, bizarrely, a Brad Pitt clone) in a doomed bid to drive a jealous Gary back into her arms.
The intense scenes of a Groundhog Day-style arguments collapsing into a bitter bout of name-calling have the ring of truth about them.
There's also some nice moments featuring Vaughn riffing off his old comedy buddy Favreau and Aniston receiving off-kilter wisdom from her barking gallery boss Judy Davis.
It's pretty formulaic men-are-from-Mars-women-are-from-Venus territory but it's redeemed by well-timed comedy playing and the odd line you could cut yourself on.
Which only makes it such a shame that, rather than persevering with the anti-romantic comedy concept, things are left in a gloopy limbo rather than opting for a thermo-nuclear emotional climax.
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