Posts tagged Other
Other movie releases
Jan 6th
Season of the Witch
The latest Nicolas Cage vehicle, Season of the Witch, is much anticipated for all the wrong reasons. The big question is: Exactly how awful is it going to be? Cage has been in more than his fair share of turkeys, and Season of the Witch, which casts him as Behmen, a 14th-century knight tasked with transporting a girl (Claire Foy) to a monastery for the performance of a ritual to end the Black Plague, has plenty of potential to be ridiculous. The girl has been accused of being a witch, but Behmen questions the truth of these allegations. There are elements of a standard quest movie mixed in with fantasy horror. The dialogue has B-movie written all over it, but the production values are good, and if you can excuse Cage’s hair style and his extreme earnestness, there might be something to enjoy.
Morning Glory
A highly rated comedy about the trials and tribulations of a naive (but also very engaging) young woman (Rachel McAdams) brought into a network newsroom to revive a sagging current affairs program with two warring cohosts (Harrison Ford and Diane Keaton). Despite the two veterans doing some of their best work, McAdams is almost unanimously hailed by critics as the star turn of this finely honed comedy. The plot is far from original, and Morning Glory does not match something like Broadcast News (1987, with Holly Hunter and William Hurt) for depth, but the chemistry between the three lead players generates a wonderful dynamism that carries the film through its few dud sequences (a romantic subplot with Patrick Wilson as the eye candy) for a thoroughly enjoyable 110 minutes of entertainment.
Happy Few
Sexy French drama by Antony Cordier about two couples who discover the pleasures and dangers of their liberated attitude to sex. Affluent, middle-class and sophisticated, Vincent (Nicolas Duvauchelle) and his wife Teri (Elodie Bouchez) become entangled in a web of sexual interplay with Rachel (Marina Fois) and husband Franck (Roschdy Zem). Their regular partner swapping allows all four leads to regularly get naked for the camera, and while tensions inevitably arise from this complex menage a quatre, Happy Few remains irretrievably rooted in fantasy fulfillment. Questions about the nature of love and the impact on family life and children are asked, but in such a tepid fashion that it does not really disturb the skin-deep look and feel of the film.
Natalie Portman’s ‘Other’ movie, now on screen
Jan 3rd
It’s been a busy few months for Natalie Portman. First there is the awards campaign for her performance in “Black Swan,” for which she is considered by many to be the front-runner for the Oscar for best actress. Then there was the recent one-two announcement that she is engaged to her “Black Swan” choreographer, Benjamin Millepied, and the couple is expecting a child. Next is a full slate of upcoming releases, starting with the rom-com “No Strings Attached,” the comic-book adaptation “Thor” and the action-comedy “Your Highness.” That’s not to mention “Hesher,” which premiered at Sundance in 2010, and in which Portman costars and has her first credit as producer. (And what have you been up to lately?)
Add to that pile “The Other Woman,” which has reemerged with the release of a poster and trailer that appeared online and the sudden announcement that it would be available on video on demand starting Jan. 1 before hitting theaters Feb. 4. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2009, where it was shown under the title “Love and Other Impossible Pursuits,” after the Ayelet Waldman novel from which it is adapted.
Anyone looking to chart how Portman arrived at her performance in “Black Swan” would be interested to give “The Other Woman” a look. In the film, Portman plays a young woman dealing with the grief of losing a newborn while struggling to fit in with her husband (Scott Cohen), dodging the scorn of his first wife (Lisa Kudrow) and learning the ropes with her new stepson (Charlie Tahan). In many ways, a more accurate re-titling might have been “The Second Wife,” as the film explores the emotional minefield of moving from being an awkwardly tolerated outsider to part of an actual working family unit.
“The Other Woman” also marks something of a departure for director and screenwriter Don Roos, as adapting someone else’s work for the first time seems to have tempered his tendency toward acidic camp as seen in “The Opposite of Sex” and “Happy Endings.” Prior to the film’s premiere in Toronto, Roos introduced the movie by perhaps inadvertently pointing the way forward in Portman’s career trajectory and “Black Swan” when he told the audience, “I hope you like challenging women.”
– Mark Olsen
Photo: Natalie Portman and Charlie Tahan in “The Other Woman.” Credit: IFC Films
Social Network Cast Honored, Oscars Narrow Choices, and Other Awards News
Dec 21st
The Social Network just got ‘liked’ by the Palm Springs International Film Festival. The Facebook film has been collecting best movie of 2010 honors left and right, and now the Palm Springs group has lent its support by naming the cast as winners in their ‘Ensemble Performance Award’ category. Jesse Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield, Justin Timberlake, Armie Hammer and Rooney Mara earned the honor and are expected to attend the Awards Gala on Saturday, January 8th in Palm Springs.
In a press release announcing The Social Network’s win, festival chairman Harold Matzner said, “Every so often, a movie comes along with performances that set the standard for a generation of actors. The Social Network combines a theme that defines our time with performances that redefine acting for the screen. The Social Network is important not because it is about this current moment in history, but because the human motivations of the characters make it a parable for this or any age.”
In other awards news, the Academy has narrowed the field of films eligible in the Best Picture category to 248. According to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences rules, “feature films must open in a commercial motion picture theater in Los Angeles County by midnight, December 31, and begin a minimum run of seven consecutive days. Under Academy rules, a feature-length motion picture must have a running time of more than 40 minutes and must have been exhibited theatrically on 35mm or 70mm film, or in a qualifying digital format.”
Nominees for the 83rd Academy Awards will be announced on January 25, 2011.
And the Broadcast Film Critics Association named Maroon 5 as the house band for the Critics’ Choice Movie Awards show which will air on VH1 on Friday, January 14, 2011 at 9:00 PM ET/PT. The Critics’ Choice Movie Awards are voted on by the 250 members of the BFCA. I’m a member and I’ll be attending the show and tweeting about it during the presentation of awards, in case you’re interested in following along with the behind-the-scenes happenings.
Last but not least, IMDB.com revealed the Top 10 stars and Top 10 films of 2010 determined by user searches and movie ratings on the popular entertainment database website. Making the Top 10 stars list are Johnny Depp, Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Robert Downey Jr, Christian Bale, Gerard Butler, Megan Fox and Zoe Saldana. The Top 10 User-Rated Movies of 2010 are Inception, Toy Story 3, The Social Network, How to Train Your Dragon, Tangled, Kick-Ass, Shutter Island, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, and The Town.
(Photo from The Social Network © Columbia Pictures)
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‘Love and Other Drugs’ puts a romantic spin on Big Pharma
Nov 24th
BEFORE ED ZWICK became Hollywood’s most solemn director (subjects include the Holocaust, American imperialism, blood diamonds), he made a movie called “About Last Night.”
This was a funny, likable comedy about singles in Chicago, a kind of freewheeling, pre-Judd Apatow ensemble piece about young men and women trying to work out the rules of dating during the go-go 1980s.
You can see Zwick trying to recover that spirit in “Love and Other Drugs,” a movie about a hustling salesman named Jamie (Jake Gyllenhaal) who takes a job at Pfizer in the mid-1990s just as drug marketing takes off, and just as Pfizer hits the streets with Viagra.
And just as the salesman falls hard for Maggie (Anne Hathaway), a young woman who wins his admiration and finally his heart by professing to be just as interested in string-free, casual sex as he.
And, oh yes, there will be shagging. “Love and Other Drugs” is noteworthy for the way it reintroduces skin and sex to mainstream movies. Jamie and Maggie have an intensely physical relationship, and Zwick is determined to be candid about it. So are Gyllenhaal and Hathaway, who are bravely naked for long stretches.
It’s not “Last Tango in Paris,” but it’s fairly eye-opening by the squeamish standards of latter-day Hollywood.
As the couple moves from casual sex to something more serious, they both confront Maggie’s illness – she’s in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease, and her sublimated terror at what lies ahead complicates the evolving romance. Her professed dislike of commitment starts to look more like fear.
You can see what Zwick and co-writer Marshall Herskovitz were after here, something about the painful irony of a Big Pharma culture that pours enormous resources into erection medication, while diseases like Parkinson’s get far less attention and money.
It’s a great idea, but one that never really takes shape in “Love and Other Drugs,” though the movie takes time to dramatize the everyday realities/absurdities of the health-care industry in its current form. (Hank Azaria has a substantial supporting role as a general practitioner trying to balance the needs of patients and the pressures of Big Pharma reps like Jamie.)
Something about the health-care critique doesn’t jibe with the love story, which doesn’t always jibe with the comic tone – it’s a Viagra movie, and yes, a character is rushed to an emergency room with the proverbial four-hour erection.
The unwelcome fits of comedy are often supplied by Josh Gad as Jamie’s brother. He’s the Jonah Hill type who occupies the wacky roommate slot that apparently all contemporary comedies must fill.
On the other hand, no one will complain that Zwick made room for Jill Clayburgh as Jamie’s mom, in what will end up as her final movie role.
Produced by Peter Jan Brugge, Scott Stuver, Charles Randolph, Ed Zwick, Marshall Herskovitz, directed by Ed Zwick, written by Charles Randolph, Ed Zwick, Marshall Herskovitz, music by James Newton Howard, distributed by 20th Century Fox.
How Franco Cut Off His Arm, and Other Movie Secrets
Nov 7th
(Newser) – James Franco’s self-amputation (using a blunt pen knife, no less) in 127 Hours is apparently so realistic that audiences are fainting and vomiting at the sight of it. How’d Hollywood pull that off? At first, by using makeup to create a decaying arm, explains one of the film’s makeup artists. But when the arm actually gets severed, prosthetic arms and tons of movie blood came into play. The Daily Beast spills the beans on a dozen other cinematic secrets:
- One actor playing twins: To create the scenes that included both Winklevoss brothers in The Social Network, Armie Hammer acted the part of one while a similarly-built stand-in played the other; Hammer’s face and voice was then digitally superimposed onto said stand-in’s face.
- Smoking crack, and doing other drugs: To portray a teacher addicted to drugs in Half Nelson, Ryan Gosling smoked “crack rocks” made from dyed broken porcelain (from a coffee mug), put in a pipe with a pinch of tobacco to create smoke.
- Binging on food: Julia Roberts ate her Italian feast in Eat Pray Love, but to film Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle, Kal Penn worked his way through 30 sliders with the help of a spit bucket.
Click here for the complete list, which includes the secrets of projectile vomiting and shooting heroin.
Hilary Swank is drawn to diligent types in other words, women like herself
Oct 11th
Her latest film, “Conviction,” out Friday, is no exception. She plays Betty Anne Waters, a real-life single mother who put herself through law school in an effort to free her brother from prison because she believed he was wrongly convicted of murder.
But instead of rebelling against or despairing over what some might see as pigeonholing, Swank, 36, seems at peace with it. She doesn’t care if she’s typecast, she says, because she likes drama.
“Dramatic, yeah. That’s how people probably think of me,” she said. “The hardest thing for an actor is to break out of what they do. I want to do it all – but at the core of my passion is drama. And I definitely get sent more dramas than anything else. But that doesn’t worry me at all, because dramas move me. They inspire me. They broaden my world more than an action film or a scary film or a comedy.”
Swank’s strong dramatic bones seem to show through even when she does attempt something less serious – such as the 2007 romance “P.S. I Love You.” Early in the story, her character’s fiance dies from a brain tumor.
“I thought I was doing something light, but I ended up crying every day of that movie,” she said, laughing.
Still, repeatedly taking on sober fare can be taxing, Swank admits. She first read the “Conviction” script after completing “Million Dollar Baby” but decided she wasn’t ready for it. “I had done so many real-life characters back-to-back, and I just needed to breathe for a moment,” she said.
“I play a lot of these true-life stories, one, because there’s not a lot of original, unique fictional stories,” she said. “If there are, they’re usually written for males.”
“Conviction,” set in Massachusetts, centers on the bond between Waters and her brother, Kenny (played by Sam Rockwell), who remained close even after they were sent to separate foster homes as children. When a diner waitress was found stabbed to death in her trailer home in 1980, Kenny – known as a local troublemaker – was charged with murder, convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Waters, believing he was innocent, devoted the next 18 years to freeing him.
Tony Goldwyn, the director of the film, spent years trying to attain the rights to the story after learning about Waters on a TV newsmagazine. He and screenwriter Pamela Gray repeatedly visited Waters to interview her, and they dug up court transcripts to piece together the script.
That strength of that story is what ultimately persuaded Swank to sign on to the film, Goldwyn said – plus, she had come to accept that this was the kind of part she played best.
“She said to me, ‘I have realized that I was put on the planet to play a certain kind of characters, and this is one of them. This is what I was meant to do. It’s to bring to life people like Betty Anne Waters,’” he recalled.
Sitting in the tea room, Swank was dressed casually in a loose-fitting dress, her hair down, sans makeup. A few of her fingernails had chipped, pink nail polish on them. It was this kind of lack of pretension in Swank’s appearance and attitude that made Waters feel comfortable with the actress playing her.
“I saw her in ‘Boys Don’t Cry’ and then ‘Million Dollar Baby,’ and there’s something about her – she didn’t come from riches,” said Waters, who lives in Rhode Island. “I think if I had been allowed to pick someone, I would have picked her. I didn’t feel like she’s this big, intimidating Hollywood glamour, rich girl.”
That’s how audiences feel about Swank as well, said Nancy Utley, co-president of Fox Searchlight Pictures, which has released three films starring the actress, including “Conviction.”
“I think that Hilary can successfully play many types of roles. However, audiences seem to especially enjoy seeing her in those that mirror her own life story: a woman who works hard against overwhelming odds to achieve a goal,” the executive said.
That’s not to say all of Swank’s recent films have been success stories. Searchlight had high awards hopes for her last film, 2009′s “Amelia,” but the Amelia Earhart biopic was critically panned and made just under $20 million at the box office.
“I take the business side to heart,” Swank admitted. “Because I used to just be, ‘I’m all about the art.’ But it’s a business too. And companies like Fox Searchlight, I think, are brave because they take chances and risks. I want to do good by them, and I want them to know that I appreciate it.”
But she’s not worried about the commercial prospects for “Conviction,” she said, because the movie “wasn’t made for a bunch of money.”
“I think: $12 million? That’s not a lot to recoup,” she said. “It would be hard, I think, if you had a $100-million movie over your head. As an actor in a movie like that, I might have a hard time breathing.”
Though she’s yet to be in a big-budget franchise film, Swank acknowledges that her career has changed significantly since “two-time Academy Award winner” was added almost like a title in front of her name.
“I think after ‘Boys Don’t Cry,’ it was like I was shot out of a cannon and it was just this little movie that could, that all of a sudden got all of this recognition.
“At that moment, I thought, Where do you go from here?” she said. “And you just have to get back in touch with why you’re telling stories. And it’s not to win awards, although that’s an incredible feeling.”
In Goldwyn’s words, Swank has a “healthy ego” about the gold statuettes.
“She knows that winning an Academy Award is an acknowledgment of a great piece of work, and it’s a tool to be able to do another piece of work. But it is a big responsibility. Those statues are heavy, figuratively and literally.”
Swank witnessed that power when she returned home to Washington. Those who used to pick on her, she found, had suddenly become her biggest fans.
“After my movies came out, I would go back to my hometown and everyone was like, ‘We always knew you were so special!’” she said, a glimmer of sadness appearing on her face.
“And I was like, ‘Oh, you did? Yeah, you always knew it? You always knew it when you took your kids away and wouldn’t let them play with me? Is that when I was special?’”
But her ability to access those painful memories is at the core of Swank’s talent, Goldwyn said.
“One of the reasons she’s a great actress is that she grew up under tough circumstances,” he said. “She didn’t have it easy. We were filming one scene in a trailer park, and she said, ‘This is very intense for me, being here, because I remember living in a place like this and not knowing if I would ever get out of here.’”
She credits her mother, Judy, for having enough faith in her to pick up and move to Los Angeles when Hilary was only 15. Her mother went to Samuel French bookstore and bought a book listing talent agencies in Los Angeles, and the two would camp out in phone booths for hours, cold-calling agents.
“That was the biggest gift my mom gave me, was to believe in myself,” said Swank, who divorced actor Chad Lowe in 2007 and now lives with her boyfriend, talent agent John Campisi, and his 7-year-old son.
“She always said, ‘You can do anything you want, Hilary. As long as you work hard enough, and you know it’s not gonna be easy, there’s nothing you can’t accomplish.’”
These days, her mother has a different plea.
“She’s always like, ‘Can you ever just do a movie where you live to see the credits?’” Swank said, smiling.
“I’m like, ‘Mom, I live to see the credits in this one!’”
Moretz puts other movie vampires to shame
Oct 1st
Chloe Moretz looks older than her 13 years. About 237 years older.
Or at least she will on the big screen today as a 250-year-old vampire named Abby — a vicious, lonely killer trapped in a child’s body.
Let Me In is based on Let the Right One In, an acclaimed book and subsequent 2008 Swedish film. Both films offer a gritty, achingly real vampire world that puts the soap-opera universe of Twilight to shame.
Let Me In gives us undead immortality without the glamour. There are no “vegetarian” vampires or perpetually shirtless werewolf hunks; there is only unending blood lust — and a desire to survive at all costs. And, surprisingly, a painful desire for companionship.
“After seeing this film, you won’t want to be a vampire,” Moretz says emphatically in a recent interview.
She is not one to shy away from complex characters. Earlier this year, she garnered critical acclaim and controversy for her portrayal of Hit-Girl, a profane, ultraviolent superhero in the film Kick-Ass. But she says playing Abby proved her toughest challenge yet.
“You kind of have to think of the different aspects of who Abby is,” she explains. “You have little girl Abby, you have 250-year-old Abby and you have vampire Abby. And the vampire is more like the devil (trapped inside) the little girl Abby. But at the same time, there’s this old soul. So there’s this three-dimensional character that you have to portray.”
At the heart of the horror film is a unique and moving love story between Abby and a boy named Owen (Kodi Smit-McPhee). Owen is bullied mercilessly at school before befriending the lonely vampiress, who moves into his neighbourhood along with her guardian (Richard Jenkins). The evolving bond between creature and boy, and the lessons they teach one another, form the basis of the film’s bloody twists and turns.
As for the Twilight movies, Moretz is diplomatic: “All I can say is, our film is deeper, darker and grittier.”
She sports an easy smile, an aqua-blue summer dress and a white sweater with flower patterns. But her ready-for-camera makeup and her articulate, thoughtful answers make her seem far wiser than her years — lending a bit of credence to the thought of her as an old soul.
“I think they are definitely twisted and really messed up, and that’s kind of the beauty of them,” she says of Let Me In’s two lead characters. “There is a very sad aspect (of the relationship) between us, but it is romantic in a very twisted, creepy and messed-up sort of way.”
Despite her powers, Abby longs for human connections — whether with her caretaker (who kills and drains bodies to provide her with blood) or with Owen, whom she might be grooming as the former’s replacement.
“She’s so lonely. She doesn’t know herself anymore. Think about it: Maybe if you’re just 50 years old, you still forget little things that you did when you were a kid. Imagine being (nearly) 300 years old and forgetting your parents and your family — everyone you know and loved. They die and you still live forever.”
As for the director, Reeves says Let Me In is a coming-of-age story under the guise of a vampire movie.
Given the trials many young people face, the director says he wanted the bullying scenes to feel as scary as the horror scenes — and to fill audiences with dread of both.
In the end, Owen learns the difference between fantasizing about violent revenge and the reality of it.
“When she’s telling him to fight back … there’s kind of a liberation in that,” Reeves says. “So, on the one hand, he can embrace her, but on the other hand, as he learns her true nature — which is that she acts (her dark fantasies) out — he has to accept her, but also understand the horror of it. You can have a fantasy about killing your enemies and (if you fulfil it), for a brief moment, there would be a feeling of victory, but in the aftermath, you’d be stuck in the horror of it.
“Kodi and Chloe’s characters are dealing with the evil within, or the darker impulses that we all have.”
‘Vampires Suck’ Really Just Gets Me Thinking About Other Awesome Spoof Movies…
Aug 19th

I haven’t seen “Vampires Suck” so I have nothing to say against it. I’m not big on Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer’s most recent spoof flicks, but all credit goes to them for starting a fun series with “Scary Movie.” I think my problem with subsequent efforts, like “Date Movie,” “Disaster Movie” and “Meet the Spartans,” is the lack of a strong narrative thread. Most of the greatest classic send-ups tell a story first and mix in the humor second.
I hear that “Vampires Suck” does that as well, following the basic story beats laid out in “Twilight” and “New Moon.” I can’t say if they’ve been taking notes from some of the classics, but whenever one of these movies comes out I always thumb through my catalog and pull out some favorites to watch again. I figure with “Vampires Suck” out tomorrow, now’s a good time to share the latest spoof movie playlist I’ve put together.
“Airplane!”
Any list of must-watch parody films needs to start and end with “Airplane!” Essentially a riff on the lesser-known film “Zero Hour,” “Airplane!” follows the exploits of a plane on which just about everyone aboard is hit with a nasty case of food poisoning, including the flight crew. Only Ted Stryker can save the day!
“Murder By Death”
“Murder By Death” is a mid-’70s send-up of the “whodunit in a remote house” genre. The cast is insane, starting with freaking Truman Capote. Then add in Peter Falk, Maggie Smith, Alec Guinness, Peter Sellers, David Niven and James Cromwell, not to mention a magical script from Neil Simon(!!!). If you appreciate classic mysteries and characters like Sam Spade, Charlie Chan and Hercule Poirot, this one is not to be missed.
“Leonard Part 6″
“Leonard Part 6″ is a Bill Cosby-starring send-up of blockbuster sequels. For the record, parts one through five don’t actually exist. I imagine some of you might be balking at this movie’s inclusion on the list; to many, it’s just not particularly good. But c’mon– the movie is about an evil vegetarian’s plot to take over the world using mind control and a keyword trigger (Kwellish!) to send animal death squads after any enemies. You will see scenes of: meat burning human skin, frogs hopping a car off a pier and Cosby in ballerina slippers. Plus, a tricked-out Porsche with a camouflage paint job and a tank-style main gun on its roof.
“Johnny Dangerously”
Michael Keaton is and forever will be Johnny Dangerously. This movie spoofs classic gangster flicks of the 1930s. Keaton plays a street kid who works his way up to the top of a criminal organization, in contrast to his do-gooding brother who eventually becomes the local District Attorney. Hilarity naturally follows, especially with a cast that includes Joe Piscopo, Marilu Henner, Maureen Stapleton, Peter Boyle, Griffin Dunne, Dom DeLuise and Danny DeVito, among others.
“Spaceballs”
Let’s look at the basic elements. Mel Brooks. “Star Wars”-like plot. A bitchy Druish princess. John Candy, Rick Moranis, Bill Pullman, Daphne Zuniga, Dick Van Patten and Joan Rivers. May the SCWARTZ be with you. Do you really need to know anything else?
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Aug 14th
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Movie Review: The Other Guys
Aug 8th
Movie Review: The Other Guys
Every buddy-cop movie focuses on an unlikely duo composed of one ultra-macho, super-effective police officer extraordinaire and his partner, who is usually frighteningly clumsy and disorganized but also a shockingly competent lawman. In such films, there are usually other officers who appear in the background. Sometimes these characters are given a small subplot, but most often they exist only to deliver a few expository lines of dialogue before fading back into performing menial tasks like filling out paperwork or collecting evidence – these men are The Other Guys.
Detectives Allen Gamble (Will Farrell) and Terry Hoitz (Mark Wahlberg) are two of these “other guys.” Allen is a nerdy forensic accountant who spends his time filing paperwork and refuses do any investigating in the field. Terry used to work the streets, but since accidentally shooting a high-profile New York figure while on duty, he has been assigned to desk work with Allen. When top-cops Danson and Highsmith (the characters who would star in most cop-flicks) are taken out of commission, Allen and Terry are thrust back into the world of real police work.
Audiences who are accustomed to Farrell playing a film’s most audacious personality will be surprised to see that he plays Allen Gamble relatively straight. His character is quiet, unimposing, avoids conflict and is rarely very pushy. Because Farrell is so unusually calm for a majority of the film, he is able to completely steal the show when he does let loose and deliver his signature excess. It’s absolutely hilarious.
Wahlberg’s character, Terry, is written far more broadly. His regular verbal lashings of Allen become a frequent source of humor and his ridiculous personal dilemmas offer plenty of laughs. The character is very funny, but Wahlberg doesn’t seem entirely up to the task. Rather than becoming this character, he seems to just be playing up his own personality – his performance almost mirrors Andy Samberg’s controversial impression of him on Saturday Night Live. It’s still funny, but fails to achieve the role’s full potential.
The two stars do seem to possess some genuine chemistry though, which is good since the script is a mess. The Other Guys is at it’s very best when they are free to abandon the story completely and simply focus on delivering a steady stream of random gags and one-liners. Luckily this happens often, because whenever audiences are left alone with the plot for too long, the movie really begins to derail. The story – which really could have, and should have, just been a skeleton for Farrell and Wahlberg to fill with character-driven comedic meat – is terribly complicated and hard to follow. It’s jam-packed with convoluted conspiracy theories, unnecessary characters and completely out of place political commentary. It’s almost enough to ruin the movie, but McKay doesn’t seem too concerned with the narrative and doesn’t spend too much time with it.
For fans of Will Farrell and Adam McKay’s prior collaborations, The Other Guys definitely falls among their lower-tier product; it’s better than Talladega Nights, but doesn’t even approach the all-out genius of Anchorman. It’s funny and enjoyable, but disposable.
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