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  • Superbad - Rocket Science

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    Under discussion:

    Rocket Science  (2007)

    Superbad  (2007)

     

    By Tricia Olszewski 

     

    You'd imagine that most 14-year-old boys feel the same way about sex comedies as they do about each of their battled-for baby steps toward the big deed itself – it doesn't matter if it's any good, the point is that they're getting some. About a decade ago, though, budding horndogs Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg allegedly became fed up with the subpar antics of their cinematic counterparts. *** this noise, they thought. We can do better, they said.


    And today you have Superbad, a movie to be filed under “ribald” whose script started out as a seed in two boys' dirty minds. Of course, the final product has gone through polishings and fleshings-out since its first wobbly-legged drafts, informed by the writers' subsequent experience (Goldberg's penning for Da Ali G Show; Rogen's starring on such Judd Apatow productions as The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up) and maturity (though a certain period joke might have been in the original). If you're not familiar with the R-comedy magic previously created by King Apatow and his court, Superbad sounds August-unexceptional: Two high-school seniors, thus far none too popular with the ladies, try to score some alcohol for a hottie's party. They've been accepted to different colleges, so the best friends are thinking it's gonna be their last big blowout. The ultimate goal: to get laid. Duh.


    But audiences who've laughed their asses off at Rogen's other work will be pleased to know that the Greg Mottola-directed Superbad is not just another teen movie. At 25, Rogen wisely deemed himself too old to star – even though he and Goldberg named the characters after themselves – but found a worthy surrogate in Jonah Hill, whose bawdy, loud-mouthed, obnoxious-if-he-weren't-so-funny turn as Seth is the '00s Bluto Blutarsky. Michael Cera's the straight man as Seth's awkward friend Evan, an extension of Cera's awkward George Michael Bluth from the celebrated but canceled television series Arrested Development.


    Seth and Evan spend most of their time moaning about their lack of action – Evan pines over one particular sweetheart, Becca (Martha MacIsaac), while Seth is happy to fixate on girls in general, especially ones who “look like they can take a dick.” So when the sexy Jules (Emma Stone) improbably invites Seth to her party, he's determined to become the booze-bringing life of it. Enter Fogell (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), who's so nerdy that even Seth considers him “the fucking anti-poon.” But, he's got a fake I.D., and even though it's a terrible one (stating that Fogell is actually the one-named, 25-year-old Hawaii resident “McLovin”), it'll have to do. Unsurprisingly, it doesn't.


    Superbad tosses its hopeless antiheroes into some fantastically ridiculous situations as they make their way to said party, including Fogell's adventures with a couple of cops (Rogen and Saturday Night Live's Bill Hader) and Seth and Evan's rather more disturbing run-in with a potential pedophile (“So, you guys on MySpace?”) and his psychotic but alcohol-holding friends. Together, the main characters riff on typical Apatow topics – the production values of porn, say, or how unfair it is that women can show off their boobs but guys have to hide their boners. The dialogue is at times overwhelmingly hyperactive, though Hill's wild-eyed and -haired mania is more difficult to settle in to than Cera's dry, soft-spoken Bob Newhart-isms. As with any solid teen comedy, Superbad isn't just about getting loaded and lucky, with Seth and Evan's friendship and impending separation – because of school, and, God willing, just maybe because of girlfriends – anchoring the story. Admittedly, the filmmakers don't always handle the material's tonal transitions smoothly, especially the friends' abrupt if inevitable blowup. But then they offer yet another inspired dick joke -- and as any 14-year-old will tell you, sometimes that's what really counts.




    To anyone thinking about writing, directing, starring in, or providing catering for a movie: Please, enough with Napoleon Dynamite Syndrome already. Nerd stories may have been around since the birth of nerds, but there's a difference between focusing on the unpopular – like Superbad – and “celebrating” the just plain weird. Rocket Science, unsurprisingly a Sundance favorite, falls into the latter category, this time propping up a high-school stutterer and his odd family and friends for evisceration/good fun.


    To his credit, first-time feature writer-director Jeffrey Blitz (Spellbound) doesn't make his central character, Hal Hefner (what an ironic name!), a colorful idiot. (Don't worry, though, there are plenty of those here anyway.) Instead, Hal (Reece Thompson) is a smart if shy New Jersey kid with a speech impediment, one so bad that he practices his lunch order on the bus ride to school. His parents just split up – loudly and unexpectedly – and his brother, Earl (Vincent Piazza), is a bullying thief. Hal isn't totally friendless, though: There's his neighbor and classmate, Heston (Aaron Yoo), an Asian who does nothing but smilingly, creepily leer at whatever's going on and, it's implied, is sexually confused. (His dad, “Judge Pete,” isn't, however, as he's banging Hal and Earl's mom.) And eventually there's Lewis (Josh Kay), an 11-year-old who invites Hal in for 7-Up after questioning Hal's right to ride his bike in front of Lewis' house. (Lewis' parents – you'll love this – are always shown playing “Blister in the Sun” on the cello and piano as part of their marital therapy.)


    The reason Hal begins lurking on Lewis' street to begin with is Ginny (Anna Kendrick), a cute but ruthless senior who's a star on the debate team. Ginny used to be paired with another sharp talker, the slick, good-looking Ben (Nicholas D'Agosto). On the night of an important debate, however – the very night Hal and Earl's father walks out! -- Ben falls silent in the middle of his argument and drops out of school. And so Ginny recruits Hal to replace Ben, impolitely reasoning that “deformed people are the best – maybe because they have a deep reserve of anger.”


    Ginny's strategy continually and painfully proves to be a bad idea, yet she persists in trying to mold Hal – and he, naturally in love, improbably continues to let her despite his multiple failures. It turns out that some sort of scheme is involved, but it doesn't make much sense. Then again, nothing besides Hal's stutter and the deep hurt it causes him feels real here. Thompson will make you ache – though not over Hal's alleged crush on the baby-faced beeyotch, who, even if her debate skills are impressive, is not for one moment likable. But Thompson makes his character's emotional wounds palpable as he tries to speak the words so clearly being bullhorned inside his head. Blitz is trying to communicate worthy messages, predominantly about finding one's own voice and taking chances, but they're so bogged down in preciousness that you can't see the intentions beneath the quirks.


  • The Nanny Diaries - The Invasion

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    The Invasion  (2007)

    http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/binary/1b2f/flicks_review1-1_16.jpg
    We'd like this off our resumes, please



    The setting is Manhattan's Upper East Side. A fresh college graduate, eager to put some sort of imprint upon the world but clueless about how to properly do so, takes a job – so easily gotten! -- as a nanny. If she squints really hard, this young woman can see the position being sorta-kinda related to anthropology, the field she eventually wants to enter. She's thrilled. Until she finds out that the exhausting, humiliating, and often just plain impossible mother-child-nanny power struggle she's now engaged in is its own circle of hell.


    If The Nanny Diaries sounds familiar, it's because you've seen it before – only it was called The Devil Wears Prada, with a fabulous spring collection standing in for the baby that a slave-driving bitch casually bears, then orders an exasperated lackey to kill herself trying to care for it. Oh: And it was also a book, a novelized bit of composite nonfiction by former New York nannies Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus. But this is Hollywood, and the book was predominantly dark and biting. So readers should prepare themselves to see the more precious, message-touting, "In a world..." version of Annie's story on the big screen. (Yes, Annie's: The character is also no longer "Nan.")


    The shift in tone is surprising only when you consider the film's writers-directors, Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini. The pair may have 2003's witty, meta Harvey Pekar biopic American Splendor on their resumes, but their offbeat sensibility isn't much in evidence here. The movie is framed as an anthropological study – which would have been more interesting if Mean Girls hadn't taken a similar approach three years ago – of "resourceful" UES mothers who manage to juggle days full of pursuits such as shopping, pampering, and puking. And, of course, monitoring not their children, but their nannies: When Annie (a dowdied Scarlett Johansson) runs into her tiny future liege, Grayer (Nicholas Art), and his mother, Mrs. X (Laura Linney), in a park, the mother and son are together only because Mrs. X had just fired Grayer's latest nanny. Annie wasn't looking to become a sitter – she'd majored in business -- but she'd just blown a big corporate interview, and when Mrs. X mishears her name as her occupation, she begs Annie to work for her. Grayer seems sweet, and Annie needs a job, so she agrees.


    Bergman and Pulcini at the very least still rather entertainingly eviscerate the book's main target, well-off women who are mothers in name only. The gorgeously coiffed and wardrobed Linney easily pulls off the icy, deplorable caricature that comprises the bulk of Mrs. X (the authors kept most of the characters anonymous, including Nan/Annie's love interest, "Harvard Hottie"). The woman mistreats her employees while pretending to live for haute couture, bullshit benefits, and general one-upmanship; really, though, she does care that her husband (Paul Giamatti, using his schlubbiness to dirtbag effect) is cheating on her and spends even less time with their bratty son than she does, and Linney is careful to let cracks of this show as well.


    But even though the end of the story was changed to emphasize this damnation of absentee parenting, the alteration is really all about making the heroine look good. Annie and her adventures in babysitting are no longer part of a satire, but a feel-good fable about growing up: Annie lies to her working-class mother, whom at one point randomly insists that "no man is going to squash your dream!", about taking the lowly job and struggles with "which kind of New Yorker" she is destined to become. The angle would be more palatable if it weren't mired in sitcom humor (how else to meet the man of your dreams but locked out in a hallway with your pants down?) and treacle ("I wuv you!"). Worse, Johansson just isn't all that likable in such a comic-everywoman role, appearing stiff as she tries to flail and sputter like a more normal 22-year-olds instead of the preternaturally self-possessed one that the actress actually seems to be. One could imagine Anne Hathaway getting it right, but apparently she was busy.

     



    http://www.slashfilm.com/wp/wp-content/images/theinvasionposter.jpg

    Whatever you say, Mom. Party!



    Human beings in general are under the microscope in The Invasion, the fourth film adaptation of Jack Finney's novel, Body Snatchers. Why make a version in 2007 after it's already been done in 1956, 1978, and 1993? Iraq, of course. And Darfur. And even Hurricane Katrina. This generation's Invasion, penned by first-timers Dave Kaiganich and directed by German-born Oliver Hirschbiegel (with some help, reportedly, from The Matrix's Andy and Larry Wachowski), doesn't just hint at the allegory inherent in its story about an alien life form steathily taking over the human race, creating a world without emotion in the process. On one side, there are the converted, who naturally want to convert. On the other are the paranoid, friends and family to the outsiders who, though they can't quite put a finger on how, are pretty sure that Uncle Joe and little Jimmy just ain't right.


    In 1956, Communism was the thing to be feared, yet the makers of the first film only briefly mention "what's going on in the world" to prompt viewers who wanted more than a mystery to read between the pods. Here, you *will* get the message. Current news constantly pours out of televisions, radios, newspapers, and, in case you can't read headlines, characters' mouths. The idea: Would we be better off as a society of robots, living without war and crime because we no longer feel? The answer is an altogether too positive one, at least for an otherwise dark and satisfying thriller.


    Nicole Kidman stars as Carol Bennell, a Washington, D.C., psychiatrist who hears the infamous "My [blank] is no longer my [blank]" line from one of her patients (Veronica Cartwright, who co-starred in the 1978 movie and gives a terrific monologue here). Immediately, Carol begins noticing oddities, too – a kid who gets attacked by a dog yet isn't frightened, the people spread out neatly at a bus stop, the sudden appearance of her ex-husband, who now insists on spending time with their son, Oliver (Jackson Bond). Even though she spends her days personally quelling her clients with drugs – here's another message for you -- she's not so hot on the idea of it occurring outside of her control. With the help of her boyfriend, Ben (Daniel Craig), Carol gets a sample of some goo she found analyzed and discovered that it's a gene-mutating life form that alters its hosts when they sleep. By this time, Washington is full of replicants – well, more than usual.


    Despite its political overobviousness, The Invasion is a taut adaptation of Finney's well-worn story. The explanation of where the body snatchers (though the term isn't used) came from and why they're a danger is more comprehensible, both in actual explanation and in feeling. These zombies aren't vacant but have menace in their eyes, and are second-Dawn of the Dead-quick to gather and zone in on creatures that aren't one of them. Whereas previous fighters against the invasion seemed to be merely living among the sleep-deprived, Carol and her small group seem in constant, claustrophobic danger of vultures out for their lives. The fear is still largely psychological, with a layer of tension added when Carol is separated from her son. But there's also an injection of action, albeit nowhere near the overload you might expect from a modern-day, Wachowski-enhanced blockbuster. (Their touch is subtle but recognizable, particularly during a darkly lit and balletically blocked car chase.) The fun ends, though, with a narrative twist that's blown up into, essentially, a giant cop-out that's completely out of character with previous versions. In the end, The Invasion is the opposite of what it should be: all emotion and no guts.


 

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