Forces of Nature at 25: Yes, Ben Affleck and Sandra Bullock Made a ’90s Rom-Com

If you take a look at almost anyone’s list of the best movies of 1999, you’re probably not going to find many romantic comedies, and even fewer if you’re looking for movies about adults. It might look rosier from today’s vantage, when rom-coms are theatrically released even less frequently, but almost every famous movie romance from the most revered movie year of the past 30 years is about teenagers (She’s All That; 10 Things I Hate About You), pretending to be a teenager (Never Been Kissed) or acting like an impetuous teenager (Runaway Bride). This leaves Forces of Nature in the unlikely, ill-fitting position of the adult rom-com in the room.
A quarter-century after its release, Forces of Nature has become a curious blip on the filmographies of its stars, Ben Affleck and Sandra Bullock, though in less resilient careers it could have been part of a downward trajectory (or, for less popular stars, a high point; it made only a little bit less money than Drew Barrymore’s Never Been Kissed, and significantly more than 10 Things I Hate About You, which came out two weeks later). Bullock would score a couple of her biggest hits in the new century and win an Oscar a decade later; Affleck would have bigger ups and downs, but at this point he’s pretty been much grandfathered into whatever remains of a star system. They’ve both made enough movies by now that many people might not realize they did one together.
The characters they play in Forces of Nature appear almost designed to reinforce this confusion by playing to distorted, disorienting versions of their respective types. Affleck is closer to his usual, the straitlaced handsome guy working within the system, though this Ben – that’s his character’s name, too! – has a touch of frustrated artist, sporting the entirely made-up job of jacket-blurb-writer for a publishing company (that’s work for a marketing or editorial assistant; the lack of curiosity screenwriters exhibit about how or why people write in other industries is, as ever, stunning). On his way from New York to Georgia for his wedding to Bridget (Maura Tierney), he meets Sarah (Sandra Bullock), a plainspoken free spirit with some of Bullock’s patented approachable-girl-next-door energy, but with an overlay of freewheeling eccentricity (which is to say eye makeup). When a minor plane accident cancels their flight and puts Ben way off the idea of flying, they team up for a journey that also involves, yes, trains, as well as automobiles, with some It Happened One Night-style bus rides and fake coupling thrown in for good measure.