First of all, this isn’t as stupid as you’d think from its title. It’s less stupid than The Adventures of Pluto Nash, or Fred Claus, and much less stupid than Joe Dirt. It comes from a story by John Hughes, a 1980s teen-movie guru before he started writing movies about talking babies, and has a screenplay co-written by Superbad’s Seth Rogen. Thus it’s not too surprising that the heroes are two teenage dweebs targeted by a bully on their first day of high school. Drillbit is a homeless guy, an amiable bullshitter who answers their ad for a bodyguard and is willing to work cheap. Played by Owen Wilson, who has made a specialty of playing amiable bullshitters, Drillbit schools them in little-known self-defense techniques. The humor isn’t too crude; as with You, Me, and Dupree, Wilson walks the line between amusing and annoying. The kids who play the leads, skinny Nate Hartley and chubby Troy Gentile, look the part. It’s not as realistic as 1980’s fine My Bodyguard, but there’s some truth to the story. It’s not super, but it’s not bad.
IMDB link
viewed 3/22/08; reviewed 3/27/08
Showing posts with label homeless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeless. Show all posts
Friday, March 21, 2008
Friday, December 15, 2006
The Pursuit of Happyness (***3/4)
? Will Smith plays
Christopher Gardner, a salesman trying to stay afloat and take advantage of
opportunity, in the early 1980s. Italian director Gabriele Muccino (whose Last
Kiss was remade this year) makes his English-language debut with a script
by Steve Conrad (The Weather Man).
+ I figured I’d like
this movie when Gardner tells a janitor that the inspiring slogan on the wall
outside his son’s day-care facility is misspelled (hence this film’s title).
Only then does he mention the four-letter graffito someone added. Thanks to
such details, this is a true story that actually feels like one. With a minimum
of melodrama, it gives a picture of how tough it is to dig yourself out from a
financial hole without a support system, and without shortcuts. Yeah, the
movie’s a feel-good story, but if you look at how hard Gardner had to work to
get ahead, and how smart he had to be, you can understand why so many people
who are not lazy and not stupid can’t do what he did. The bone-density scanners
Gardner carries around for much of the film provide both a running sight gag
and a metaphor for the weight of the past mistakes he’s trying to overcome. The
movie this reminded me of was the underrated Cinderella Man. Although
that was about Depression-era boxer Jim Braddock, it was the other fairly
recent movie that made me feel something of what it must be like to have to
worry about every dollar, and the indignity of not being able to shield your
family from the effects of that day-to-day struggle. Smith, in what might be
his first regular-guy film role since Made in America, tones down but
maintains his on-screen affability. Smith’s son Jaden plays the same role in
the movie; he’s a natural.
- I guess if I wanted
to criticize this I could say that whereas Cinderella Man used
Braddock’s story as a window into Depression-era America, this doesn’t use do
anything but show one man’s unlikely path to success. I could say that the
movie falsely implies that anyone can make it by hard work and fortitude,
whereas in reality Gardner also had a great deal of innate intelligence that
also made that possible. I could say that it’s a movie about a poor black guy
trying to make it in corporate America that nonetheless has nothing to say
about the intersection of race and poverty. But if this isn’t a movie of great
social import, it is well-paced, moving, and consistently entertaining.
= ***3/4 I found this
Pursuit absorbing from beginning to end.
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