Director: Ivan
Reitman | Starring:
Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, Sean Young, John
Candy, John Larroquette, Judge Reinhold
Released: 1981
| Runtime: 106m
| Rating (out of 5):
**** |
|
Okay, maybe four stars
is overdoing it a little bit, but this thing is a classic. Some may
say it's classically stupid, but I say it's classically hilarious!
Okay, there's some really retarded stuff in this movie, but Bill Murray
gives one of the best jerkoff performances of all time in this send
up of the US Army. Oddly enough, this movie came out at about the
same time as Goldie Hawn's Private Benjamin, which basically
used the same fish out of water thing that this one did. John Winger
(Bill Murray) is a loser. His best friend, Russell Ziskey (Harold
Ramis), is also a bit of a loser. Winger's life goes from bad to worse
when he loses his job, his girlfriend, his car and his apartment all
on the same day. Ziskey teaches English to foreigners, which means
he has them sing "Do Wah Diddy" and say "son of bitch. Shit!" The
two guys see their lives at a dead end, and Winger talks his friend
into signing up for the Army with promises of exotic travel and sexy
European ladies. Winger is always the ring leader, and Ziskey the
follower, so he goes along with it. So, off to basic training they
go. And, of course, they meet the other misfits there, including the
fat-ass, the psycho, the dumbass, the whatever. Can this band of idiots
make it to graduation without blowing something up? Will their drill
sergeant, Sgt. Hulka, have a coronary before it's all over? Will their
commanding officer, the inept Capt. Stillman (John Larroquette), even
let them out of the brig? As with all good 80's movies, there's a
good dose of gratuitous nudity and anti-Soviet feelings. Unlike a
lot of these movies, this one doesn't ever get serious or try to teach
us a lesson. It doesn't turn into a rah-rah USA propaganda film. Winger
is still an asshole at the end of the film--albeit a hero asshole--and
John Candy is still fat. Luckily for them, the Soviets are a bunch
of bumbling idiots. Honestly, a lot of parallels can be drawn between
this film and Full Metal Jacket. You have the basic training
section and then the real life battle scenes. Granted, the battle
scenes in this movie take place in a tank disguised as an RV and involved
a bunch of idiots running around with no clue as to what the hell
they're doing. Nobody dies--including the enemy--and nobody loves
them long time (well, actually Sean Young kinda does.) Okay, the more
I describe this thing, the more I realize it's not really a very good
movie, but it really does pack a punch in the memories department.
The scene with Ramis and Murray in Murray's apartment in the beginning
of the film is worth it alone. I laugh my ass off every time I see
that damn basketball fly through the window. The timing is just so
good between the two guys, you just knew that the two of them in Ghostbusters
had to be a blockbuster. The deadpan Ramis and the charismatic wiseguy
Murray are naturals, and they play it fast and loose in scenes that
seem half scripted and half ad-lib. Just watching Murray try to do
push-ups is hysterical. I know he's grown a lot as an actor over the
years, but he remains one of the best in the business at making something
out of nothing. [On Demand]
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