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After losing her job at a gardening magazine, Becky gets drunk with her best friend Suze (Krysten Ritter). In a tipsy haze, she mistakenly sends a ranting letter about the economy to Successful Savings , a no-nonsense financial publication, while accidentally mailing her resume to a vacuum cleaner company. The mix-up lands her a column at Successful Savings , where she writes about personal finance using colorful, unintentionally brilliant metaphors drawn from her own shopping addiction. Under the pen name "The Girl in the Green Scarf," Becky becomes an unlikely financial advice sensation. This success attracts the attention of her handsome, straight-laced boss, Luke Brandon (Hugh Dancy), the editor of the magazine. As Becky juggles her newfound professional success with a budding romance and the constant threat of being exposed as the debt-ridden fraud she is, the film barrels toward a spectacular, TV-talk-show-meltdown climax where all her lies finally catch up to her.
: The film remains a fascinating case study in adaptation, sparking a debate that continues to this day. For many, the movie stands on its own as a fun, glossy rom-com. For fans of the books, however, it serves as a frustrating example of a beloved story being streamlined into a generic Hollywood product.
). Despite being drowning in credit card debt, Rebecca dreams of working for the high-fashion magazine
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After losing her job at a gardening magazine, Becky gets drunk with her best friend Suze (Krysten Ritter). In a tipsy haze, she mistakenly sends a ranting letter about the economy to Successful Savings , a no-nonsense financial publication, while accidentally mailing her resume to a vacuum cleaner company. The mix-up lands her a column at Successful Savings , where she writes about personal finance using colorful, unintentionally brilliant metaphors drawn from her own shopping addiction. Under the pen name "The Girl in the Green Scarf," Becky becomes an unlikely financial advice sensation. This success attracts the attention of her handsome, straight-laced boss, Luke Brandon (Hugh Dancy), the editor of the magazine. As Becky juggles her newfound professional success with a budding romance and the constant threat of being exposed as the debt-ridden fraud she is, the film barrels toward a spectacular, TV-talk-show-meltdown climax where all her lies finally catch up to her.
: The film remains a fascinating case study in adaptation, sparking a debate that continues to this day. For many, the movie stands on its own as a fun, glossy rom-com. For fans of the books, however, it serves as a frustrating example of a beloved story being streamlined into a generic Hollywood product.
). Despite being drowning in credit card debt, Rebecca dreams of working for the high-fashion magazine