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Posts Tagged ‘Justin Timberlake’

Friends with Benefits (2011)

I was unsure what to expect going into Friends with Benefits at an advanced screening a few weeks ago. It always seemed a bit too close in plot to No Strings Attached (made extra odd as the female leads Mila Kunis and Natalie Portman had literally just starred together in Black Swan), a film that came out less than six months ago, and while the trailers looked amusing, they seemed to look a little too close to an atypical romantic comedy. But the film actually ended up surprising me. Well, the first half at least.

Jamie (Kunis) is a headhunter in New York City who helps aspiring graphic design artist Dylan (Justin Timberlake) land a prestigious job at GQ. They become good friends, and after a discussion about their relationship failures, decide to start having sex without the relationship schmaltz (hence the titular phrase). But the good times cannot stay uncomplicated for long.

Rather surprisingly, the first half of Friends with Benefits is a ridiculously raunchy sex comedy that is sweeter than it is crude. The dialogue and one-liners drop at a steady pace, and there is plenty of laugh out loud moments. I was genuinely surprised at just how much I was enjoying the film, and how well co-writer/director Will Gluck (who knocked Easy A out of the park last year) helped capture the tropes and stereotypes of romantic comedies, and went entirely against them. The scene that starts the initial sexual antics is a complete dissection of the genre, and seeing the film twist and turn around the familiar plot devices was wonderful to see. It made the film feel hilarious, but also made it feel like it was attempting to do something different at the same time. Adding in a couple of random cameos from notable actors was a bit wacky (which the trailers have ruined slightly), but helped add to the humour.

Except the film comes to a screeching halt just about halfway in when Jamie and Dylan come to the all too obvious realization that they may want something more. The film then becomes drastically more dramatic, a lot less sweet, and significantly more ordinary. Even the laughs suffer, landing less with a snicker and more with a groan. Everything it does to shift itself away from the romantic comedy genre feels wasted because it falls into all of the stereotypes quicker than it poked fun at them. It almost feels like they wanted to desperately feel different, and then decided to just go the safer route as opposed to sticking with its offbeat early tactics. I was really enjoying the film significantly more than I imagined, but suddenly felt bored and totally thrown off by the drastic tonal shift.

While sketch comedy has proved to be one of his strong suits, Timberlake seems to have a lot of trouble carrying the film. We know he has the chops to command the screen and be absolutely magnetic (we have David Fincher and The Social Network to thank for that), but here he seems to be struggling with every other scene. He lands most of his jokes well, does decently with the dramatic bits and has plenty of chemistry with Kunis, but he lacks the spark I think most people will expect him to have in this role. He comes off as just okay, and more amateur than anything else. He would have been better suited in the film as a key supporting player, as opposed to the lead.

Kunis on the other hand, is significantly stronger and proves that her turn in Forgetting Sarah Marshall may have been an early suggestion of the formidable comedic talent she may quickly become. Gluck is not able to achieve the same level of breakthrough that he got from Emma Stone in Easy A from Kunis, but she manages to carry the film almost single handedly. Even at the script’s weakest moments, she grins and pushes forward, never once appearing to be struggling as much as Timberlake does. I think my only complaint against her is that she spends a good portion of the film completely nude, yet ends up wearing all too obvious pasties under a white shirt in one scene. It seems more like a complaint against a horrendously bad editing and lighting decision than against her, but it was a scene that made her seemingly-realistic character feel a whole lot less believable.

Patricia Clarkson and Richard Jenkins both deliver good performances, but sadly feel like they are just plagiarizing from characters they have played better in the past. Jenna Elfman (who I did not realize was still acting) does a little better in a warm and significantly low-key role as Dylan’s sister Annie. But it is Woody Harrelson who steals the entire show as gay sports writer Tommy. He plays the character ridiculously over-the-top, but never feels like he is encroaching on any stereotypes. He makes it his own, and is almost too good in the role. He gets all of the film’s best dialogue quips, and runs circles around everyone on screen. In more than one instance, Timberlake looks legitimately shocked at some of the things Harrelson says and gets away with. I think the film could have only benefited from including more of him.

In the end, Friends with Benefits is both surprisingly well done and unsurprisingly ordinary. It tries so hard initially to be the anti- romantic comedy, and then just ends up falling into the same predictable elements that every other film in the genre has already done countless times before. The film is genuinely hilarious when it wants to be however, and this does save it from being a total waste. But it could have been so much more.

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Bad Teacher

Bad Teacher is a great concept that resulted in a style of humor like most of the Adult Swim cartoons you see today: When the jokes hit they hit well, but when they miss, they miss quite badly. The cast was delightful, but could only go so far with the material. As a matter of fact, it was the cast that saved the movie from being a total disaster by providing their comedic chops, their charm, and their good comic timing that you don’t see enough of nowadays. Despite all that however, Bad teacher is a shiny apple with a few rotten parts.

Elizabeth Hasley (Cameron Diaz) is a foul-mouthed, bitter, and quite nasty teacher that is keeping the job only to pay the bills after her rich fiancée dumps her. Facing debt, aging, and loneliness, Elizabeth starts setting her sights on a boob job and on a new (rich) teacher (Justin Timberlake), whom has also captured the attention of a manipulative rival (Lucy Punch). The script was helmed by two veteran writers of The Office (Gene Stupnitsky, Lee Eisenberg) as they use their non-television ratings boundaries to mix plenty of vulgar and raunchy humor with even some tidbits of cruel humor. Unfortunately, their lack of boundaries led to a mediocre script.

This film’s biggest falters come in the form of the script. Despite the promise in the premise and the cast involved, the script was convoluted, and didn’t have much structure until the second half. As a matter of fact, the film switches up the pace very unexpectedly when the next act approaches. Pretty much almost all the crude and vulgar humor failed to draw laughs, with one notable exception involving one of the odder “sex” scenes in recent memory. The movie was a great idea not exactly explored upon, and was full of smaller ideas that were not utilized. Many good smaller characters did not get enough time in the script; most notably the students, the gym teacher (Jason Segal) and the main character’s roommate (Erik Stonestreet).

Despite the writing being a fickle mess, the cast was superb, from the small roles to the big ones. Cameron Diaz I can honestly say is one of the most underrated talents in Hollywood, because she rarely ever delivers a mediocre or weak performance. She has this aura, this energy that can save the worst of films (See: What Happens in Vegas) and it is no different here. Despite her smoking/drinking/vulgar/manipulative/cynical/cruel/superficial ways, we still secretly root for her to succeed in reaching her goal. Very few actresses can pull off this type of charm.

Lucy Punch, despite having a bit of questionable material, delivers as Diaz’s rival. Jason Segal could have helped the movie a lot more if he was in it more often, as he delivered the laughs every time he was on-screen with his wit, sarcasm, and I-don’t-care attitude. Television staples Phyllis Smith and Erik Stonestreet were hilarious in the far-too-few moments they were on-screen. The movie does indeed have its laughs, but the potential was so much greater considering all the talented actors involved.

Jake Kasdan as a director doesn’t have much of a resume, but he does have the comedic chops and timing, and he proved this with the underrated Walk Hard. With Bad Teacher, he did not have as much good material to work with but could have still helped the movie if he had tightened the first third of the movie better. There was a lot more unnecessary fluff in the first half of the movie compared to the second half. Smaller plot lines were never resolved, certain jokes literally fell off without a punchline, and certain situations were brought up but never explored. Many concepts were also never explored: especially that of how shallow and shady we all become towards each other in the workforce.

Bottom Line: Bad Teacher was a great idea, poorly executed, but relentlessly saved by the energetic cast. This movie could have mixed the dark charm of Bad Santa with the subtle workforce ridiculousness humor of Office Space to become something very, very special. But neither style of humor was dwelled upon deep enough. The first half had its laughs, but was far too convoluted and was salvaged mainly because of the hilarity of Cameron Diaz. The movie definitely picks up later, but by then its too late, the potential was wasted. Either way, you will certainly laugh, you will remain entertained, but will also be bothered by what it could have been.

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Yogi Bear (2010)

Completely Boring!!!

Between the 2010 horror film Bear, the creepy 2002 film The Country Bears, and this mess, I don’t think I’ve seen one single decent bear movie in years. The three all have one common problem of being mediocre films, but they both can be excused because at least they don’t use the dreaded CGI effects that this horrendous adaptation of the cartoon classic uses. I think I’d be complaining too if the film took The Country Bears route and used real bear suits, which only means this film couldn’t win no matter which direction it took. Unless it used the classic style of animation the timeless cartoon did. Now that is some wishful thinking.

The voice acting is the thing that redeems the film a little bit. Yogi’s voice isn’t perfect, but I accepted it since it was Dan Akroyd. Boo Boo’s voice wasn’t too bad either surprisingly since JT was the voice. While the voices aren’t that perfect, it’s one of the few high points the film does have. Pretty much everything else is two dimensional, loud. and overly silly. Like all kids movies now.

The story takes place where it should, Jellystone Park. There inhabits some of finest scenery, the freshest of air, and the talking, pic-a-nic basket stealing Yogi Bear. Jellystone Park starts taking a beating when tourists are attracted to amusement parks more than the wilderness. Mayor Brown (Andrew Daly) states that he will close Jellystone and sell the land. Yogi (Akroyd) and Boo Boo (Timberlake) make it their priority to team up with Ranger Smith (Tom Cavanagh) and Rachel (Anna Faris), a documentary filmmaker filming some of her movie at the park, to save Jellystone and it’s lovely scenery.

I just can’t get over the fact that this is LIVE ACTION. If something started out as a cartoon, just leave it has one. I’m sure Hanna-Barbera didn’t think in fifty years their beloved bear would be seen on the big screen complete in CGI and unnecessary 3D. This is the same execution taken during the film Alvin and the Chipmunks and the dreadful Scooby Doo movie. Make everything else live action, and leave the main star(s) for the CGI.

The one film where I can accept the fact it mixed live action with animation is Who Framed Roger Rabbit?. Besides being a fun film, it was also new for the time. Nothing like that had been done, and it didn’t go cartooning around with the audience. Plus it wasn’t just kid orientated, it had a lot of crude humor to itself that many adults would find fun. I can say with a straight face that if Who Discovered Roger Rabbit? does get made, this could certainly see a remake too, done with CGI. Lord have some mercy.

It’s also strange that the humans just cope with having a talking bear live in their park. If I was a ranger, and there were two talking bears living in my park that were stealing picnic baskets, and running around doing whatever they please. I think I’d either scream, or send them to a zoo. In the cartoon, the rangers didn’t seem to care if the bear could talk or what. But that was a CARTOON, they were supposed to be used to it. In a cartoon, logic doesn’t apply. There is such a thing as being overly cartoony, but back in the 50′s, 60′s, 70′s, and 80′s it was part of the act. Now shows like Spongebob Squarepants and pretty much every PBS show takes the “cartooning” WAY too far.

While watching this film, I couldn’t help but reflect on when I went to The Yogi Bear Campground many times during my childhood. The place was pretty much a traditional campground, but had various Yogi Bear themes. There was the Ranger Station, which served as the souvenir shop. It had a lake, similar to the one in the film, where people could go alone or with a friend out on the lake in a paddle boat. Plus it showed Friday night movies, and a Yogi cartoon frequently.

Besides having a lot to offer, it was miserable. Plain miserable for me. Me, my parents, and a lot of their friends with kids would get together and spend three days, two nights out there. Usually around Halloween weekend where a lot of events were held. No matter what year we went, it would be rainy and crappy. The campers were mediocre, very compressed, and somewhat unkempt, and being that we wouldn’t stay too long, my parents and I would refrain from taking a shower. So were already dirty, and all the time we spent outside in the rain probably made up for our missed showers. There are a lot of other events I don’t want to get into because I myself hate reflecting on them.

When I read in 2008 a CGI/live action adaptation of Yogi Bear was going to be made, I wasn’t surprised and I wasn’t happy. When the trailer premiered a few months ago I was ranting on it as well. I caved it and saw it to say I did, and came out sorry for my foolish actions. It will most likely keep the kid’s entertained because of it’s color, it’s loud effects, and flat out goofy premise. But with it’s lame jokes, abrupt, protruding CGI, and annoying human characters, Yogi Bear makes for an unnecessary and tedious trip to the theater.

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