LOVE HAPPENS (12A).

Drama/Romance/Comedy Aaron Eckhart, Jennifer Aniston, Dan Fogler, Martin Sheen, Judy Greer, Sasha Alexander, Joe Anderson. Director: Brandon Camp.

LOVE comes knocking when a widower least expects it in Brandon Camp’s poignant drama, co-written by Mike Thompson.

Thematically muddled, but with its heart in the right place, Love Happens struggles for the entire 109 minutes to gel the central character’s inner conflict with the romantic comedy conventions that dictate his new relationship.

It’s a peculiar confection, glazed with schmaltz and cliches, and structured as chapters from the self-help book that propels the characters on their journeys of self-discovery.

No-one is more painfully earnest than Aaron Eckhart as the film’s grief-stricken protagonist, who delivers a moving performance as a man ripped apart by guilt.

Opposite him, Jennifer Aniston is pure decoration. Her poorly written role is a dramatic contrivance to coax the widower out of his shell and remind him that, in a world of darkness and misery, everyone deserves a second chance at happiness.

Burke Ryan (Eckhart) is still haunted by memories of the day his wife died in a car accident, with him in the passenger seat.

Consumed by grief, he channels all that anguish into a self-help tome.

When the manuscript becomes a nationwide best-seller called A-Okay!, Burke is transformed into a poster boy for anyone who has ever loved and lost, and he embarks on a book tour with ambitious agent Lane (Fogler) at his side.

During a seminar in Seattle, Burke meets pretty florist Eloise (Aniston), whose latest boyfriend (Anderson) has just been caught cheating behind her back.

Sparks of attraction fly, but Burke’s old wounds have yet to heal and he is scared of being hurt.

Love Happens sets up an obvious twist, which the screenplay clearly telegraphs, but the resolution only kicks into gear with intervention from Burke’s father-in-law (Sheen).

There are a couple of laughs – such as Burke’s meeting with an advertising agency which has mocked up potential products to plug him as a brand like diet pills.

“Finally, a loss you can feel good about,” says the advertising slogan.

***