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Every time Jean goes through a bad breakup, she relocates much to the dismay of her teenage daughter, Holly. Holly devises a plan to invent a secret admirer for her mother, so she'll be happy and not have to relocate anymore. But eventually her mother wants to meets this guy but can't so what can Holly do?
[Hilary Duff movies] never do solve their one nagging flaw: Duff's characters are remarkably self-possessed for teens but not enough to recognize the sitcoms they inhabit.
The Perfect Man has a plot that turns sweet and charming Hillary Duff into a serial liar. She's not just telling little fibs. She's engaging in a prolonged and kind of mean practical joke on her mother.
June 20, 2005
Guardian
Watching this unspeakably rubbish teen romcom is, to quote David Lodge's classic description of National Service, like a punishment for a crime you can't remember committing.
Like a Nike commercial without a shot of the sneakers.
June 21, 2005
Variety
[The] situation is mined mostly for mild chuckles and tepid sentiment.
June 20, 2005
Observer (UK)
The intrigues are laboriously contrived, the film exudes disingenuous sentiments, and it has three happy endings -- one for Mum and one for each daughter.