Alex and Emma

 is a 2003 movie starring Kate Hudson and Luke Wilson.

Alex Sheldon is a popular author of romantic comedy novels. The two novels he's written have touched the populace with their mix of humor and heartwarming moments. Unfortunately, he has a penchant for gambling, and has a debt of one hundred thousand dollars to the Cuban mafia. After breaking into his apartment, destroying his computer, and dangling him out a window, they give him an ultimatum - pay the money in thirty days, or die. He can't get any more advances from his publisher, which means that he has to write another novel in just thirty days.

With no computer, he has to get a stenographer. After misrepresenting himself as a legal firm to hire her, Emma barely decides to stay. Thus the writing begins.


 * I Uh You Too


 * Betty and Veronica: In Alex's novel, Polina (the Veronica) and Anna (the Betty).
 * Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: The three different au pairs in Alex's novel, who are Emma's equivalents: the character starts as the Swedish and blonde Ylva, then the German and redhead Elsa, and finally the American and brunette Anna. The brief Spanish au pair before Anna, Eldora, was also a brunette
 * Composite Character: Alex says that his character Polina is this for several women he knew throughout his life.
 * Most Writers Are Writers
 * Show Within a Show: Scenes from Alex's novel make up half the film. The characters are (mostly) played by their equivalents in the "real world". Including the dancing mafiosos.
 * It's interesting to note that Emma's equivalent in the world of the novel change as Alex's views of her change. This annoys her to no end, as she's the one who has to retype the whole thing every time.
 * The Roaring Twenties: The time period of Alex's novel
 * Write What You Know: Alex bases the characters off the people he knew and knows in real-life
 * Very Loosely Based on a True Story: The working title was actually Loosely Based on a True Love Story, due to being based on basically the same thing happening to Fyodor Dostoevsky.