Category Archives: comedy

Lucky Number Slevin

Paul McGuigan takes an American spin on the gangster revenge flick he did so well a half decade earlier in Gangster No. 1. The result here is good but while it is no doubt funnier lacks the vicious edge that put the 2001 movie over the top. You will want to pay close attention, though, as almost nothing is as it seems.

Lucky Number Slevin has quite the cast. Josh Hartnett is the title character, Bruce Willis is a veteran mob hitman called Goodkat(?), Morgan Freeman and Ben Kingsley are partners turned rival gangsters called The Boss and The Rabbi (yes, Kingsley’s character really is a rabbi), Stanley Tucci is an NYPD detective, Mykelti Williamson is a dimwitted henchman, Danny Aiello has a cameo as a bookie, Robert Forster a cameo as one of Tucci’s colleagues and Lucy Liu is her usual sexy, gregarious self as Slevin’s accidental love.

The plot is a black humor twist of Hitchcock’s mistaken identity classic, North by Northwest, with Slevin standing in for Cary Grant’s Roger Thornhill and Liu for Eva Marie Saint. Writer Jason Smilovic doesn’t leave the comparison to chance and has Kingsley’s character talk about taking his immigrant father to see it. But while we viewers know from the start that Slevin Kelevra is not the Nick Fisher the others seem to think, well, like I said at the top nothing is as it seems; Lucky Number has onion-like layers, an Outback Steakhouse Bloomin’ Onion, fried and big and greasy and still so tasty.

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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.

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Knocked Up

This feel good for freaky teen boys flick, a surprise Summer 2007 hit, was actually sweeter and kinder than I’d expected. Ben Stone (Seth Rogen), hefty and goofy looking, a geek’s geek, scores a one night stand with the stunning Alison Scott (Katherine Heigl) via far too much booze and yet not enough to prevent him from getting her with child. The meat of the movie is Ben’s decision to put aside his childish things, well-represented by his slacker pals (Jason, Jay, Jonah and Martin), and become the husband and father Alison and his child ought to have.

Another hit from the mind of writer/director Judd Apatow, who previously gave us Fun With Dick and Jane, The 40 Year Old Virgin and the TV series Freaks and Geeks. He smartly makes the conflict about more than just slacker goof versus career-minded or beauty versus beast (which Alison’s sister Debbie, played by Leslie Mann, can’t get past) but proffers a complete disconnect of worlds and ways of thinking between the two groups. Coming somewhere in the middle as symbol of what Alison might have had is Debbie’s husband Pete (Paul Rudd), a yuppie on the surface but whose inner geek has nearly been stomped out of existence by his wife’s utter dominance.

Knocked Up compares well with Virgin. In fact Ben and Virgin‘s Andy Stitzer (Steve Carrell) are two sides of a very similar coin, if Ben hadn’t connected with Alison and continued on his previous, sad path.

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Because I Said So

An out and out chick flick, this was our Saturday night date movie with TS1 even bringing the fresh popcorn. A fun way to spend a couple of hours after a day full of English and American football–Liverpool had another crap 0-0 outing but USC reached back for a nice 24-3 rebounder–and Mandy Moore is growing on me as a nice young actress

Moore costars with Diane Keaton in Because I Said So, a slight romantic comedy whose twist is that Keaton is not only Moore’s overbearing mother Daphne, she’s afraid her own life is over at 60 (her birthday party is a key scene) without her ever having had an orgasm. Lauren Graham and Piper Perabo play Moore’s character Milly’s two slightly older, better adjusted sisters so you can imagine the locker room scene is very male viewer friendly.

Daphne despairs of the 20-something Milly ever finding the true love she never did–the girl’s father was “the wrong choice”–and so she posts a single ad asking for suitors for her daughter. Interviewing applicants in a hotel lounge she finds one good man, an architect named Jason (Tom Everett Scott), and has an arrogant conversation with Johnny (Gabriel Macht), leader of the jazz combo playing there.

Milly of course meets both men and, this being the 21st century, sleeps with both after a decent/minimal number of dates. Johnny turns out to be a better match, though appearances and mom disagree. Hilarity ensues. Daphne meets Johnny’s dad (Stephen Collins) and learns what an orgasm feels like. Milly and Johnny’s five year old son Lionel hit it off instantly. Jason never does figure out how to get the stick out of his ass.

Fairly standard stuff but nicely done.

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Smokin' Aces

Writer/director Joe Carnahan (the less than stellar Narc) was apparently going for a parody of an early ’70s, semi-blaxsploitation type of movie, with plenty of carnage and characters so stereotyped they could have come from Ralph Bakshi’s animation studio in a setup more cliched than the Spy Kids trilogy. He almost made it work, too, until a jarring turn to the serious at the climax nearly ruined all his good work.

Jeremy Piven is Vegas entertainer and friend of the mob Buddy “Aces” Israel and the title refers to a rumor that dying mafia chieftain Primo Sparazza wants his last act to be rubbing out Israel, with a $1 million bounty. See Buddy’s gotten a little too close to his criminal pals and crossed over into active participation, and when he gets caught decides to trade his inside knowledge for a free pass.

From the large cast, a few performances stand out. Ryan Reynolds and Ray Liotta are FBI agents, partners sent to get Aces from his Reno penthouse hideout as soon as the ink is dry on his deal. Alicia Keys and Davenia McFadden are a beautiful pair of hitters (and lovers); McFadden gets the biggest gun of all, a .50 caliber she sets up in a room in a hotel across the street facing Aces’ suite. Joel Edgerton is an assassin whose stock in trade is a mastery of disguise and mimicry, his Hugo about as different from his lead role in Kinky Boots (which is another one I missed writing up!) as I can imagine.

A 2.5 for the humor and confident action of the first 90 minutes. Points off for the last 15 minutes as well as driving home Buddy Israel’s sleaziness well beyond the necessary.

modestly recommended, if you like this kind of thing.

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Let's Go to Prison

This 2006 piece of dreck comedy was so boring that I hit stop after 15 minutes (right after Will Arnett’s character’s trial opens). I expected more from Let’s Go to Prison since it stars Arnett and Dax Shepherd, was written by the Reno 911/Night at the Museum/The Pacifier team of Thomas Lennon and Robert Ben Garant and was directed by the funny Bob Odenkirk.

not recommended

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Casanova

An enjoyable historical romantic comedy based on a fabricated episode of a very young Giacomo Casanova set in Venice in the mid-1700s, this Heath Ledger-Sienna Miller 2005 film from Lasse Hallstrom uses the legendary Lothario as an exploration of the meaning of love.

Ledger is the title character, footloose and fancy-free and a charmer who slices through the clothing of beautiful women of all stations. He’s the bane of Bishop Dalfonso’s (Ken Stott) existence because Casanova has powerful protectors including the Doge of Venice. He’s hard up for cash, though, and has finally pushed too far; to escape prosecution and stay out of debtor’s prison as well Casanova must make a real marriage to a woman carrying a sizable dowry by the festival days away.

Fortunately the lovely, lithe blond Victoria (Natalie Dormer) is anxious to be rid of her virginity and has her noble father wrapped around her pinkie so, despite misgivings about her suitor’s reputation, daddy agrees. The same day the groom-to-be is challenged to a duel by Giovanni (Charlie Cox), who lives across from Victoria and has been lovesick since hair appeared on his chest. He’s a terrible fencer, though, and his older sister, wearing identical clothing and mask, takes his place.

Casanova has seen her before, when the unusually educated Francesca (Miller) scandalized Venetian academics by debating a man, also wearing men’s clothes and a wig and mustache disguise. He falls for her immediately but, aside from his impending nuptials, she is also betrothed to a wealthy cousin (Oliver Platt) as the means to solve the whole in the family accounts after dad died.

Finally, Dalonso’s superiors in the Inquisition have decided he can’t bring Casanova to the bar and replaced him with the utterly no-nonsense Cardinal Pucci (Jeremy Irons). Pucci is not put off by the planned wedding nor the political conflict with the secular authorities.

The way these three plots crash together intelligently and with great wit is what makes me give this a recommended result. Also chipping in are the colorful clothing and city scenery, as well as an outstanding performance by Omid Djallai as Casanova’s manservant.

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Idiocracy

This 2006 sci-fi comedy from Mike Judge, the man behind Beavis and Butthead, King of the Hill and Office Space, was greatly anticipated by many Judge fans and disappeared without so much as a commercial ripple. Which was too bad since this movie is funny, but understandable since the zingers hit just a tad too close to home for the mass market audience.

Idiocracy stars Luke Wilson and Maya Rudolph as two statistically average folks turned into test subjects on a military hibernation project in 2005, only to wake up 500 years later after being lost due to a scandal involving the scientist and general running the experiment. Instead of the idealistic flying car future we generally expect, the pair find that reproductive demographic trends lead to one where everyone is stupider than a pair of broken twigs.

The planet is dying, of course, especially since water’s been displaced by Brawndo, a sort of Gatorade, and half the population works for the company. Being the smartest man alive according to a prison aptitude test, Wilson is told to solve the world’s problems in a week, or else. Being of what we’d consider average intelligence, however, all he can think of is to tell people to use ‘water from toilets’ to feed crops and that doesn’t work fast enough.

Judge uses present-day trends, such as the increasing number of mindless TV game and reality shows, to extreme good use. Consumer-facing giants such as Starbucks and H&R Block are still around but their products have transformed into, er, brothels (e.g. lattes are handjobs). Wilson is very well-suited to the role while Randolph’s role is rather smaller and less demanding. Dax Shepherd is quite good as one of the smarter 26th century morons.

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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.

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Little Miss Sunshine

A surprise ‘major indie’ comedy from last summer, this gem about an extra-quirky six person family is from the pen of Michael Arndt and enabled him to (finally?) quit his long time position as Matthew Broderick’s assistant. Most people pointed to Abigail Breslin’s performance as the title character but I enjoyed Alan Arkin’s grandfather more. He reminded me of a more realistic version of the, er, unrestrained old lady played by Estelle Getty in The Golden Girls, the big payoff coming even after he’s offscreen in the climactic beauty pageant talent performance by Breslin’s Olive.

Plenty of laughs throughout but this one nearly left me choking. Arkin won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor–and Arndt for Best Original Screenplay–so perhaps I wasn’t the only one to recognize his quality. Breslin did get a Best Supporting Actress nomination and the movie one for Best Picture.

Little Miss Sunshine covers a long weekend with the Hoovers, set off by two events: the wife’s brother Frank (Steve Carell) comes to stay with them after a suicide attempt and Olive gets a chance to fill in for a regional pageant winner at the state finals. However its the California finals and the Hoovers live in New Mexico, the tot had entered on a whim while visiting a cousin, and the family is too strapped for cash to fly the 1000 miles, plus neither of the adult males is willing to stay home with Frank who can’t be left alone.

Cash is short because Dad (Greg Kinnear) is trying to get a deal to launch a career as a motivational speaker but, since these guys are all pretty much losers, the promised deal falls through. Bryan Cranston (yeah, the father from Malcolm in the Middle) has a nice hard-edge part as the dealmaker who can’t deliver. Mom (Toni Collette) is near the end of her rope dealing with this, not to mention her teenage son (Paul Dano) not speaking for nine months from a mixed inspiration of German philosopher Nietsche and plans to apply to the Air Force Academy. Not known to the family, Grandpa has a habit of sneaking snorts of heroine in the bathroom.

The only vehicle large enough for all six is a nearly dead decades old yellow VW Bus and, in the Job-like never ending series of problems for the Hoovers, its transmission kicks during the first day’s driving. Not all the way, as long as the car can be pushed so it can be started in third gear, and of course the middle of nowhere garage can’t get a replacement until Thursday. But the family abide, pushing the VW and parking on a downhill where possible.

Directing team Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton make the most of the limited budget; while they didn’t get Oscar nominations they did get one from the Directors Guild, not bad for their feature film debut.

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