Nick (Jesse Eisenberg) is a 20-something loser who would rather aimlessly, delivering pizzas, to have a career that requires a greater degree of responsibility. His roommate and best friend, Chet (Aziz Ansari), accepts a job as a teacher, left all sorts of sins of youth that fired into the night and risk behaviors. This change puts pressure on the friendship of friends. " But when Nick is kidnapped and wired with a bomb vest, Chet rises to the occasion, coming to help his friend. Together, the two should rob a bank to save the life of Nick. And as we all know, there's nothing like a bomb and a bank robbery to make good friends.
After scoring big with 2009 is an excellent Zombieland, director Ruben Fleischer followed that success with this high-concept comedy, well cast but without imagination, which is probably only found an audience with short attention spans. The laughs are scattered, minor laughter everywhere. Enter the ridiculous charisma, 30 minutes or less works well for comedy, it's stupid, but is quickly forgotten.
Lead time standouts Jesse Eisenberg. Last year, the Social Network, Eisenberg moved to a strange anti-man who still carries the eccentric actor, but with a unique potential protagonist. Here, Nick takes care of well, even if the material is quite a challenge. Eisenberg did not fail to inject a sense of convincing some of the key scenes, especially the beautiful Dilshad Vadsaria, who plays the love interest in the film.
As winger Eisenberg, Ansari gets an opportunity to display his comic talent and do so with mixed results. This is the script lacks. The duo of Nick and Chet is like two men right with the jokes, which runs them almost a note. They often entertain each other with a quick and cryptic dialogue that is more fun because of the delivery and content. And the jokes seem a little too inside-a cheat sheet would help to fill in the details. Most Banter about their secret relationship with Nick Bromance and twin sister of Chet. It runs fast and the loser is Ansari, who is bored halfway of the movie.
Even in one dimension is Danny McBride, who plays Dwayne, one of twilight-minded idiot, Master Minds, a plan stupid to kill his rich father (Fred Ward played well). Coming off a much better is his accomplice Travis (Nick Swardson), who may be the best written character in the film. McBride, who has made a career talking about his genitals, and the creation of a defenseless people and fun, show a little 'different. He is getting too old for a role and must move to another person, because this is starting to bring his welcome.
The game-changer movie, Michael Peña, who plays a gang banger hired to kill the father of Dwayne. Peña plays his tuned to a criminal somewhere between parody and reality frightening. In a better script, this would be Something Wild Peña, Jonathan Demme's film, which introduced the world to the dark side of Ray Liotta. Here Peña makes a film a bit marginal 'more interesting, and his face-offs, Fred, "Remo Williams" Ward is almost worth the ticket price.
30 minutes or less is really targeting a specific audience courted well with movies like Pineapple Express, Observe and Report. The visual appearance of these films are included here, as Bong-humorous tone repeated, but unevenly. The focus is not on the weeds, the film is based on a bank robbery in history. There was a controversy about the historic events of the real world. Director Michael Fleischer and writers Diliberti and Matthew Sullivan has denied any direct link between the film and the tragedy of 2003 Pizza Delivery driver Brian Wells, who succumbed to his injuries in a collar bomb he was forced to be exploded. The horrible incident involving a bank robbery and conspiracy to kill a rich father of someone. Given the obvious similarities, the family was outraged by Wells film, which is considered a satire of the sad events for Laughs.
After scoring big with 2009 is an excellent Zombieland, director Ruben Fleischer followed that success with this high-concept comedy, well cast but without imagination, which is probably only found an audience with short attention spans. The laughs are scattered, minor laughter everywhere. Enter the ridiculous charisma, 30 minutes or less works well for comedy, it's stupid, but is quickly forgotten.
Lead time standouts Jesse Eisenberg. Last year, the Social Network, Eisenberg moved to a strange anti-man who still carries the eccentric actor, but with a unique potential protagonist. Here, Nick takes care of well, even if the material is quite a challenge. Eisenberg did not fail to inject a sense of convincing some of the key scenes, especially the beautiful Dilshad Vadsaria, who plays the love interest in the film.
As winger Eisenberg, Ansari gets an opportunity to display his comic talent and do so with mixed results. This is the script lacks. The duo of Nick and Chet is like two men right with the jokes, which runs them almost a note. They often entertain each other with a quick and cryptic dialogue that is more fun because of the delivery and content. And the jokes seem a little too inside-a cheat sheet would help to fill in the details. Most Banter about their secret relationship with Nick Bromance and twin sister of Chet. It runs fast and the loser is Ansari, who is bored halfway of the movie.
Even in one dimension is Danny McBride, who plays Dwayne, one of twilight-minded idiot, Master Minds, a plan stupid to kill his rich father (Fred Ward played well). Coming off a much better is his accomplice Travis (Nick Swardson), who may be the best written character in the film. McBride, who has made a career talking about his genitals, and the creation of a defenseless people and fun, show a little 'different. He is getting too old for a role and must move to another person, because this is starting to bring his welcome.
The game-changer movie, Michael Peña, who plays a gang banger hired to kill the father of Dwayne. Peña plays his tuned to a criminal somewhere between parody and reality frightening. In a better script, this would be Something Wild Peña, Jonathan Demme's film, which introduced the world to the dark side of Ray Liotta. Here Peña makes a film a bit marginal 'more interesting, and his face-offs, Fred, "Remo Williams" Ward is almost worth the ticket price.
30 minutes or less is really targeting a specific audience courted well with movies like Pineapple Express, Observe and Report. The visual appearance of these films are included here, as Bong-humorous tone repeated, but unevenly. The focus is not on the weeds, the film is based on a bank robbery in history. There was a controversy about the historic events of the real world. Director Michael Fleischer and writers Diliberti and Matthew Sullivan has denied any direct link between the film and the tragedy of 2003 Pizza Delivery driver Brian Wells, who succumbed to his injuries in a collar bomb he was forced to be exploded. The horrible incident involving a bank robbery and conspiracy to kill a rich father of someone. Given the obvious similarities, the family was outraged by Wells film, which is considered a satire of the sad events for Laughs.
No comments:
Post a Comment