Category Archives: buddies

Varsity Blues

Pre-Friday Night Lights, pre-We Are Marshall, pre-Glory Road, Varsity Blues (1999) is nonetheless a step in their direction with its depiction of a snarky, proto-intellectual backup QB (James Van Der Beek) who dethrones a throwback, Neanderthalish career high school football coach after the starter goes down with a nasty broken leg.

In Texas, as in many parts of the American Midwest and South, high school football is just about a second religion and one which gets much more attention than their first. Players are given passes on every transgression and West Canaan even built a statue of Coach Bud Kilmer (Jon Voight) out front of the ball field. Jon Moxon (Van Der Beek), despite signing up to be the second string quarterback, mocks the adulation and yearns to escape to the Ivy League.

In this season the Coyotes are closing in on a 23rd division title in Kilmer’s 25th year in charge when Lance Harbor (Paul Walker) gets creamed after Billy Bob (Ron Lester), an effective yet massively overweight lineman, has a near heart attack as the ball’s snapped. Harbor’s done and Moxon must come on to finish the game and season. He can’t stomach the masochistic, racist Kilmer and his success gives him the leverage to ignore him. Also, there’s a hot scene where the boys spend the night before the Big Game at a strip bar where one of their younger, hotter teachers picks up some extra cash.

mildly recommended

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Clerks II

Ten years on and much Hollywood success later, Kevin “Silent Bob” Smith returns to bookend the original black & white indie comedy that launched him. Where are Dante and Randal now? Has Dante outgrown his indecisiveness or Randal his adolescent preoccupations? And did they ever see that fabled donkey show?

No, no and no, of course, not in a Kevin Smith movie. The opening of Clerks II is Dante (Brian O’Halloran) raising the metal grating one morning at the Quick Stop only to find the interior consumed in fire; Randal (Jeff Anderson), with typical thoughtlessness, had left the empty coffeepot on the previous evening. Fate finally put an end to their internment and not ambition or even pride (the boys are 33 years old, for crying out loud) but what do they do with the opportunity? Take jobs behind the counter at the local Mooby’s fast food joint.

Dante has found love, sort of, in the form of their hot high school classmate Emma (Jennifer Schwalbach Smith, married in real life to writer/director Smith) and, a year after the fire, the two are headed to Florida in 24 hours where they’ll move in with her wealthy parents for a few months until the wedding. Emma seems to have realized that the hunky guys she’s been dating before Dante have egos to match her own but Dante’s low self-esteem makes him her’s to control.

Randal is as foul-mouthed and misinformed as ever. One running joke is over the made-up anti-black slur porch monkey, that he never understood his grandmother was a racist and all the nasty names she taught him were offensive epithets. Another is his confusion of Anne Frank and Helen Keller, though not to quite the same effect. He isn’t happy with Dante’s plans. There’s a new younger character, sort of Randal’s opposite (virgin who’d rather wash his mouth out with soap than curse), played by Trevor Ferhman called Elias; the kid is the butt of many, many of Randal’s jokes.

Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Smith) are here too, just returned from six months in rehab, hanging out back dealing drugs and dancing their weird dances. Rosario Dawson is Becky, the lovely younger woman who really loves Dante, though she won’t admit it and he doesn’t realize it. Jason Lee and Ben Affleck make their customary cameos though Lee has the better of it, playing a high school classmate of our boys who recently struck it rich after his internet startup was acquired for millions.

The best scene in C2, for me is when Becky tries to teach Dante how to dance for his wedding up on the Mooby’s roof (other than the open and close and a couple of brief scenes, the entire film takes place in or around the fast food joint). The song is the Jackson 5 classic ABC, played at blast volume by Jay down below, and after we see the blinders fall from Dante’s eyes at the girls beauty and charm Smith gives a terrific homage to the Ray Charles music store scene in Blues Brothers. First a series of quick cuts to the other leads toe-tapping or headshaking wherever they are and then a full blown coordinated dance scene out in the parking lot.

Overall funnier than I thought it would be, if (and this is a big if) you can get past the continuous stream of obscenities and general teenage level nastiness. And that donkey scene? Close but not quite what you’ll be expecting.

recommended

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Rush Hour 3

After taking down Vegas and Hong Kong, the unlikely pairing of LAPD detective James Carter (Chris Tucker) and Hong Long PD Chief Inspector Lee (Jackie Chan) are after the biggest game of all in Paris, the leaders of the Hong Kong Triads. Brett Rattner retains the director’s seat he’s occupied for all three installments while Jeff Nathanson, who took over the writing for 2, repeats here.

In Rush Hour 3, Lee’s mentor Ambassador Han is about to reveal this great secret of the Triads before a made-up version of the World Court when he’s assassinated with Lee just a few feet away from the podium. Lee sees the sharpshooter and gives chase, running into Carter. Han’s daughter, now all grown up and hot, is kidnapped, sending the boys to France to finish the job Han started and recover the girl.

Tipped to a private gentlemen’s club, Lee and Carter connect with a hot Asian (Youki Kudoh) and French-African woman (Noemie Lenoir), respectively. Kudoh, unfortunately for Lee, is a Triad assassin and requires him to use all of his agility to get away but Lenoir is much friendlier to Carter. Max von Sydow and Oscar-winning film director Roman Polansky are not bad in supporting roles as the head of the World Court and a French police detective. Polansky, of course, has also been a fugitive from American justice for over 30 years on a statutory rape charge, so I was quite amused to see him playing a cop; von Sydow has played this type of roles so many times over the years that one worries he’s going to walk through his lines.

Hiroyuki Sanada is Kenji, the principal villain, beginning with Han’s killing and right to the climactic confrontation with Lee and Carter in the restaurant at the top of the Eiffel Tower. Along the way, through the three’s interactions, we finally learn a bit of Lee’s personal story and Carter shows he hasn’t been talking out of his ass when claiming to have spent the years since the duo’s last adventure studying martial arts.

Overall this was an enjoyable entertainment even if it is also the slightest of the three Hours. Rattner and Nathanson still to their formula like SuperGlue in every scene and line of dialog, and I’m not sure I’d pay to see Rush Hour 4, but since it’s a decent formula we walked out of the theater laughing and if they do make a fourth I’d certainly watch it on cable.

recommended

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You, Me and Dupree

Caught up with this light buddy/romance romp from 2006 on HBO the other night; actually it was pretty close to chick flick territory except for Owen (‘I’m the blonde one’) Wilson’s whack job of a best friend character. Plot is fairly basic: In a beautiful ceremony on a beach in Hawaii, Carl (Matt Dillon) marries Molly (Kate Hudson) with Dupree (Wilson) as best man and the whole fancy thing paid for by Molly’s real estate mogul dad (Michael Douglas), who also happens to be Carl’s boss.

Dupree loses his job, girlfriend and apartment on returning from Hawaii and the newlyweds reluctantly put him up, until he nearly burns their place to the ground in a buttery sexual encounter. Dad also is not happy about the marriage as Mom died several years earlier and Kate is (in a non-sexual way) the primary object of his affections, so he tries to break up the marriage albeit in ways that his darling daughter won’t see and some that may be subtle enough that even Cal won’t recognize them for what they are.

You, Me and Dupree is a romantic comedy at its core, though, and so the chicanery is played for laughs and ultimately fails, with Dad realizing Kate will always be his daughter (of course). But writer Michael LeSieur (this is his only IMDB credit) and directors Joe and Anthony Russo give us enough laughs and slippery story twists to make the hour and 45 minutes entertaining despite the predictable end. Most of them come from Wilson’s character, who despite being in his mid 30s is still utterly naive and child-like. Seth Rogen, who was pretty good in 40 Year Old Virgin and apparently even more so in Knocked Up, is mostly wasted here as the third buddy in Carl and Dupree’s clique.

recommended

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Ocean's 13

Danny, Rusty and their ever-growing squad of adorable con men are back for a third stroll down Frank’s Way and for my money, its the charm, the best of the bunch. Perhaps it was just a question of growing into the material, or perhaps Clooney and Soderbergh finally got the right writers in Brian Koppelman and David Levien. You might think the key was finally getting the right antagonist in Al Pacino’s Willie Bank since Andy Garcia (sorry dude) was never really more than a second-choice Pacino in the first two flicks, which is made clear here by comparison, but I don’t think so.

No, Pacino never seemed to be fully occupying this role; maybe he was preoccupied with his upcoming title role in Salvador Dali & I? Side note: that film is directed by Andrew Niccol, a very different thing from his previous movie, Nick Cage’s Lord of War. Anyway, Al has two key scenes that bookend the film, the first with Elliot Gould that sets the events here in motion and the latter when he confronts George Clooney after the scheme has done its damage.

For me the real credit goes to the writers, Soderbergh and Clooney, Brad Pitt and Matt Damon as the key players in getting Gould’s money back, really good bits by Casey Affleck and Scott Caan once again playing the runts of the pack who put in some of the key elements (especially the scenes with Affleck at the Mexican dice factory channeling Norma Rae), and Julian Sands as lifelong battling security geeks. Don Cheadle and Bernie Mac never really rev their engines and the same is true for Vincent Cassel reprising the Fox.

Damon finally gets to trot out the Nose, working over Ellen Barkin (Pacino’s top assistant) who, it turns out, is a cougar, and Bob Einstein (better known as Super Dave Osborne) is the Damon character parent who shows up as a (fake) cop to bail out the boy. Carl Reiner does an upper crust Brit act to make Pacino think he’s the hotel award judge but really David Paymer is the judge and the 13 give him an unbelievably hard time to ensure the new hotel does not join Bank’s other properties in winning the Five Diamonds (but make it up to Paymer at the last).

recommended

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The Dukes of Hazzard

Hollywood studios, like most businesses, don’t really care where the next idea comes from, only that it return more cash than the cost. So don’t expect the big screen remakes of TV shows to end any time soon and, in fact, since there are more shows now than every, we’ll probably get more of them. Sometimes this works well, as with Star Trek, The X-Files and The Untouchables, and other times… well I’m sure we all wish that the execs had left Val Kilmer’s version of The Saint and Nicole Kidman’s Bewitched in development hell.

The Dukes of Hazzard falls somewhat in between. I expect there are a few more deserving scripts languishing in Hollywood that would be money better spent but this movie has just enough of an edge to keep it off the crap pile. This I credit to director Jay Chandrasekhar, a key member of the very subversive Broken Lizard comedy crew (Super Troopers, Club Dread).

There are also two surprisingly good acting jobs. Seann William Scott as the slightly more airheaded brother Bo is just a perfect fit for the role; this is perhaps the pinnacle of the progression of characters he’s played since American Pie, stupid, aggressive, not quite connected to reality. Plus, he got much better lines than Johnny Knoxville’s Luke Duke. If it weren’t necessitated by the original TV show, I could almost see leaving the Luke character out. Except Luke has the smarts to drive the plot, though perhaps cousin Daisy could handle that portion. The other really good acting comes from Burt Reynolds as Boss Hogg; he plays the ‘villain’ broadly enough to retain the cartoony feel.

moderately recommended

P.S. In an amusing coincidence, M.C. Gainey, who plays Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane here, had a bit part in one episode of the TV show.

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Wedding Crashers

Although a bit uncertain over whether it wants to be a farce or romantic comedy, this flick out of the Wilson/Ferrell/Vaughn crew is still pretty funny. Not as funny as it could have been if Owen Wilson’s puppy dog eyes were left out and the plot attached more completely to the actual wedding crashing, but still okay.

Wedding Crashers is the story of John Beckwith (Owen Wilson, the blonde brother) and Jeremy Grey (Vince Vaughn), mid-30s DC yuppies who have the rulebook for how to successful crash any wedding as the penultimate source of loose women. Only superhot loose women for them, easily acquired through a complete set of stories, tricks and over the top joie de vivre suitable to any crowd. The opening 30 minutes or so, as we watch the pair go through a sequence of weddings and after-wedding sex, are brilliantly hilarious.

Then they decide to crash the wedding of the season, the oldest daughter of the Secretary of the Treasury. Not only is he Owen’s economic idol, his family is intended to model the Kennedys with multi-generational political service, touch football games at the family compound and a passion for sailing. At the wedding Vaughn hooks up with the seemingly kooky youngest daughter (played with flair by Down Under hotness Ilsa Fisher) and Wilson with the middle daughter (Rachel McAdams)–Vaughn as per SOP for a single slog but Wilson falls for his.

The second act of the film covers the 36 hours after the wedding when the boys are invited back to the Clearly estate. Immediately we get two wrenches–McAdams is essentially engaged (to Bradley Cooper, Will from Alias) to a two-faced bastard and Fisher is not going to let Vaughn off the hook that easily. Here’s where the film turns into a just above average romantic comedy: Wilson and McAdams are clearly meant for each other but Cooper is slick and sleazy enough to keep them apart. And tough, as he and his buddies are not above repeated beatings to keep the status quo.

The script by new boys Steve Faber and Bob Fisher and the direction from David Dobkin, who worked with Vaughn in Clay Pigeons and Wilson in Shaghai Knights (the sequel, not the first), has sufficent laughs and hot chicks to make up for the slower bits. Although the creepy scenes towards the end with Will Ferrell, as Vaughn’s crashing mentor, would surely have been left in the editing room if Chazz Reinhold had been played by a less commercially significant actor.

recommended

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Sideways

For a movie from the director of About Schmidt and Election, and with the awards, nominations and critical acclaim it got, I expected a lot more of Sideways than I saw on the screen. If memory serves, some of those who agreed with me pointed to the Paul Giammatti character as someone with whom the critics would seriously self-identify and therefore rate more highly than, say, you or I would. TS1 agreed with me on this.

Very basic plot: Miles (Giammatti) is a failed novelist with a failed marriage but somehow still best friends with college roommate and modestly successful actor Jack (Thomas Haden Church) and the two head to Santa Barbara County wine country for a weeklong bachelors’ jaunt before Jack–who wants one last fling–marries a young hottie. Miles does know his wines, though, and Jack, well, Jack knows how to liven up a party. They meet and hookup with hot chicks (Virginia Madsen and Sandra Oh) but Miles has trouble getting past his despression and Jack’s sleaze.

The four main characters all do reasonably good jobs though other than (perhaps?) Oh none seem to reach too far from their natural personality. The scenery is stunning but not surprising; compare it to Kenneth Brannaugh’s 1993 version of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing and I think you’ll understand how a director can make more from the same general type of setting.

My core complaint is with director/co-writer Alexander Payne. All through the film I was waiting for the sly humor of Schmidt and Election and for some serious escalation of the dramatic tension but the best he managed was a faked car crash and a confrontation between Miles and his ex-wife after Jack’s wedding ceremony. Apparently the latter was intended as the last straw in Miles’ character journey but it just didn’t work for me.

barely recommended and definitely see the other two Payne movies first.

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Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle

Between unloading boxes and figuring where everything goes we watched a couple of amusing flicks, one recent, one the last of a series from the ’60s and ’70s. Both enjoyable though and I think the commonality is a bit of turning audience expectations around.

In Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle we watch a pair of stoned Asian 20-somethings who only want to get those special burgers cooked at the title chain to quench their munchies. What should be a short, simple drive winds up being an all night comic adventure. At some points the script relies a bit too much on cardboard stereotypes but in general John Cho and Kal Penn succeed with a funny movie that’s a level above typical young adult crap like Down to You or A Guy Thing.

recommended

Revenge of the Pink Panther is the final of the five original movies starring Peter Sellers as Chief Inspector Jacques Clouseau and one of Sellers’ last three movies. To some degree this was a payday movie for him and writer/director Blake Edwards, part of a sequence of three made a dozen years after the first two; those were critical and box office successes and while these did pull in some cash no rave reviews were really expected.

French mobster Douvier (Robert Webber) needs to show his American partners his grip remains strong, so at the suggestion of a lieutenant Clouseau is selected for assassination. Through typical pratfalls and misunderstandings everyone thinks the plan works and insane former boss Chief Inspector Dreyfuss, instantly cured at the news, is brought out to find the killer. At the same time Douvier tosses out his mistress (Dyan Cannon) and in running from her own killers literally bumps into Clouseau; teaming up they of course send Douvier to ruin and Dreyfuss back to the sanitarium.

recommended

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The Whole Ten Yards

The first one was good and ended with the good guys in comfortable places. No need to bring them back to resolve some hanging story thread or buddy-buddy tension. The Whole Nine Yards just made too much money for the people involved not to try a second time. I think–so hard to be sure–this one was so bad creatively and did so bad financially that there won’t be a third.

In The Whole Ten Yards our two couples (Bruce Willis and Amanda Peet, Matthew Perry and Natasha Henstridge) are fluffing along, more or less okay, until Hungarian mobster Laszlo Gogolak (Kevin Pollack as the brother of the crime boss he played last time) gets out of jail wanting revenge. Without showing us how he found them, Pollack kidnaps Henstridge which forces Perry to run to the others’ Mexican hideout. Not being quite as stupid as his brother he sticks a GPS unit in Perry’s Porsche and we get (a pretty crappy) firefight out front of the villa. Anyway, it goes on from there with what’s supposed to be a big twist.

George Gallo wrote the script (his past gems include Wise Guys–no, not Scorsese’s classic, this was the 1986 Devito/Piscopo comedy–and more recently David Arquette’s postal classic See Spot Run) and only came up with a bunch of shtick and bits which director Howard Deutsch can’t weave together. I think the missing piece is a character like Michael Clarke Duncan’s Frankie Figgs who bridges Willis and Perry to the Pollack’s gang; here is only Tasha Smith as Frankie’s sister and she’s got so little to do I’m guessing most of her lines were left on the editing room floor.

Deutsch has a history of making useless sequels and remakes such as Grumpier Old Men, The Odd Couple II, and Some Kind of Wonderful (okay, technically this wasn’t a remake but it sure seemed like they took the filling from all the previous John Hughes flicks and said “Ooh, let’s toast the bread this time!”) so I can only blame myself for not heeding every single review published.

I really do blame myself. All these cable channels, books, websites and I spent 100 minutes over two nights watching this. Must be punishment for something really bad.

not recommended–if you can’t find your remote pull the damn plug!

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