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(2008) rt:122m **½
Director: Michel Gondry
Starring: Jack Black, Mos Def, Danny Glover, Mia Farrow
I'm one of those people who find Jack Black funny
for about 2.5 seconds and then want to chuck him in a dumpster with
Jamie
Kennedy, Tom
Green and Robin
Williams during his second coke phase (or non-coke phase). Manic
for manic's sake just makes for sucky acting and frayed nerves. Michel
Gondry, on the other hand, is a pure original, and generally makes
smart, intriguing movies. Some, like Eternal
Sunshine, border on brilliant. Not so much here.
I don't know if it's Gondry's, uh, Frenchness or what, but after his
first movie spoof his ideas fall completely flat. Here was a vehicle
to make hysterical remakes of any film ever made, and the ones he
chooses to focus on don't hit the mark, nor mine the depths of true
American pop culture. This is my dream set up. I have like hundreds
of films I could have suggested, but Gondry just didn't follow through
on the concept fully.
And what was the concept? An entire store full of videotapes (which
in and of itself is ridiculous) gets degaussed when a magnetized Jack
Black walks in. Mos Def, his buddy, is minding the store while the
shop's owner, Danny Glover, is out of town. Now everyone coming to
rent tapes (because they apparently don't have DVD players) finds
them blank. In order to combat this, Black and Def enlist a couple
folks to put back what Black destroyed by recreating the erased films
using their camcorder and props found in alleys and whatnot. The films,
despite veering pretty heavily from the original films' plots, being
acted in by Black, Def and a female friend, and only being a fraction
of the original length become hits with the neighborhood toughs and
grandmas alike.
Meanwhile we have a total Breakin'
2 situation going on. The worst cliché in moviedome, by
the way (see just about every 80s ensemble comedy and just about all
Adam
Sandler movies), as Glover's building is about to be razed by
the city to put in a bunch of condos (or something) unless he can
raise enough money to make improvements to the crumbling edifice.
Save Miracles! So instead of a car wash or a break-off or even a golf
tourney or yacht race (see One
Crazy Summer) they decide to raise funds by allowing people in
their community to be in the films they're shooting for a fee, taking
on roles in their favorite movies and getting to keep the end product
for viewing with their freinds and family.
The plot around this old building is based on the most likey fake
story that a famous jazz legend was born and raised in the room upstairs.
Glover, who is actually really good in this, insists on the validity
of the story, and the final film at the film festival is an enacted
documentary about his life (played by Mos Def). Those scenes of the
community, who are otherwise struggling in their real lives, coming
together to work on this film and rally around a local hero (real
or imagined) are actually quite touching, and salvage the film somewhat.
This is the magic Gondry can spark. I just wish he had put as much
effort into some of the up front and maybe consulted someone more
engrained in the head of an American of a certain age to make some
of those remakes more compelling and/or funny. Wasted potential is
always the worst part of any so-so review. [DVD, MF]
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