Director: John
Hamburg | Starring:
Paul Rudd, Rashida Jones, Jason Segel, Jaime
Pressly, Jon Favreau, Jane Curtin, J.K. Simmons, Andy Samberg
Released: 2009
| Runtime: 105m
| Rating (out of 5):
** |
Buy on Amazon
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Somewhere back in the
day, two men took divergent paths. One became one of the most recognizable
"nice guy" actors of our time. He plays the nice Jewish
boy all Jewish mothers hope and wish for. Granted, he's rarely a lawyer
or doctor, and is often a bit of a wet blanket, but in the end he
proves to be that mensch we all wish we could be. The other started
off a comedian, made a terrible actor and instead became the smart,
snarky liberal funnyman of our generation. He's the nice Jewish boy
who's mother shakes her head and asks why he can't be more like that
nice boy, Paul Rudd. But for all of us out there who identify with
these two men, we are so much more often the smart-mouthed Jon Stewart
than we are the former. Much to our mother's chagrin.
I had a job many years ago at which I was tortured on a daily basis
both in person by my boss and over the phone by all sorts of Hollywood
types who were mostly pissed at my boss, but often took it out on
his surrogates out of frustration. During my five or six months on
the job, I remember two particular people who were nice to me. One
of those people was Paul Rudd. The dude was truly a mensch. So I automatically
have a soft spot in my heart for the guy. Ms. Hipster happens to also
like him because he's a not-so-tall, nice Jewish boy. Just her type,
I guess. She also happens to like Stewart, the smiling devil to Rudd's
angel. The secret to Rudd's angel is his easy charm and believability
as that guy. We all know that guy. He's super smart, funny, a little
insecure and self-deprecating, but ultimately someone you're ultimately
glad to have as a friend. And that's the dude he plays in this movie.
A dude with no dude friends. How does something like this happen?
Well, there's one way, which usually ends with said dude waking up
one morning and realizing that he's just avoiding what's really going
on and ends up changing his name to Feerce and becoming a cage dancer at
The Water Works (or some similarly named club). And the other is a
complete myth after the age of 30. Why? Because after 30, most women
have paired off and have no need for said dude, or else said dude
has found a steady who will in no subtle way demand that these relationships
fade to black. Think of your friends. Engaged, non-closeted guy with nothing but female friends. Nothing, right?
So the movie begins on a flawed premise. Granted, science fiction
banks on the same methodology, so I suppose I can suspend belief for
a bit. Reality aside, the premise has some legs in terms of comic
set-ups. Rudd is getting married and realizes he has nobody to ask
to be his best man. I'm not sure why he doesn't just ask his brother,
but I suppose that would make for a pretty dull movie. He’s set up
on several “man dates,” with varying degrees of success and gayness.
But, as we all know, Rudd eventually ends up meeting and hanging out
with Jason Segel who, despite also being one of the tribe, is one
of those weird, giant ones that they must have grown in a German lab
somewhere back in the 40s. And predictably Rudd, the nice guy, and
Segel, the free spirit, teach each other about the two sides of life.
It’s a shame, really, as this falls into the same trap that most goofball
buddy comedies fall into, where the narrative line is predictable
and rote up and down. Everything is good, everything is bad, everybody
is a dick and then in the end there’s a group hug. Yeay!
So knowing that this is how things go, the point to judge these types
of movies on is how they string together the acts with jokes. I honestly
hate that shit, but this is why I’m disappointed in most movies. This
one certainly has some laugh out loud moments, but more that are just
awkward. Actually the funniest thing in the whole movie seemed like
Rudd just ad-libbing his air-bass and trying to execute a Jamaican
accent (for no particular reason). Otherwise it seemed like somebody
has an idea, paired a couple of talented, comic actors and hoped for
the best. Sometimes it just takes a liitle more effort, dude. [HBO]
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