In Trainwreck, comedian Amy Schumer plays a blossoming writer on a path of love denial.<br /><br /> Ever since she was young, Amy’s father drilled the motto that monogamy isn’t realistic into her head. Now she lives by this credo.<br /><br /> Says Schumer of her big-screen acting debut, “It’s about a girl in her early 30s navigating love when her defense mechanisms, which may or may not be sleeping around and drinking a lot, start to catch up to her and it’s not cute anymore.”<br /><br /> While her character is free from stifling, romantic commitment, in actuality, she’s kind of in a rut. The problem is, she hasn’t quite realised this.<br /><br /> Directed by Judd Apatow and written by Schumer herself, “Trainwreck” stars an ensemble cast that includes Tilda Swinton and Colin Quinn. <br /><br /> While not autobiographical, Schumer owns up to sharing some traits with the character she portrays. “A lot of the insecurities and defense mechanisms are very much me,” she admits.<br /><br /> “Trainwreck” debuts in the US on July 17 and in Singapore an