By Renee Lorenz Special to OnMilwaukee.com Published Feb 11, 2011 at 3:00 PM

Adam Sandler's dipping into the romantic comedy well again with "Just Go With It," another in a string of quirky relationship tales, this time partnered with Jennifer Aniston, another veteran contributor to the genre.

The plot gives us Sandler as a standard bed-hopping playboy, picking up an unrealistically large pool of young and attractive conquests under the premise that he's the victim of an unhappy marriage. After falling in love with one of his impossible catches, he enlists the help of Aniston's character to pretend to be a soon-to-be ex-wife in a desperate attempt to salvage his relationship.

All Dear Abby-style sentiments aside, I just plain don't like that "Just Go With It" follows the exact same format as every other rom-com in existence. They're predictable, they're dull and they require way too much willing suspension of disbelief to convince me I didn't just waste two hours of my life. 

I like Sandler's comedy for the most part, so this probably won't be a total trainwreck of a film. He has recruited a fair amount of fellow funnymen and women as supporting cast, including fellow SNL alum and regular Sandler movie bit player Kevin Nealon. Even still, that's a really small redeeming quality.

"Just Go With It" is just another mundane, typical example of the artificial Hollywood genre that is Romantic Comedy. It looks vapidly entertaining but wholly boring, and I definitely won't be spending theater money on it. 

Renee Lorenz Special to OnMilwaukee.com

Contrary to her natural state of being, Renee Lorenz is a total optimist when it comes to Milwaukee. Since beginning her career with OnMilwaukee.com, her occasional forays into the awesomeness that is the Brew City have turned into an overwhelming desire to discover anything and everything that's new, fun or just ... "different."

Expect her random musings to cover both the new and "new-to-her" aspects of Miltown goings-on, in addition to periodically straying completely off-topic, which usually manifests itself in the form of an obscure movie reference.