Saturday, June 26, 2010

Playlist: Youth in Revolt

This was the film where Michael Cera finally played a character other than Michael Cera. Or at least that's what everyone kept saying to me whenever I mentioned that he's never played anything other than himself. I had my doubts. As usual, I was right (by "usual" I mean, "for the first time".)

YiR is another amusing, quirky comedy--nothing hysterical, but enjoyable. Cera is his usual self, meaning he's himself as a high school kid in love. The big twist here (as opposed to his character's last name, Twisp) is that he develops a smooth criminal alter ego named Francois Dillinger. Francois has a moustache. Not exactly Russell Crowe in The Insider, but it's a start. So, he's going to me Michael Cera playing Scott Pilgrim. So what? I like Michael Cera. Everyone likes Michael Cera. That's his superpower. Probably got bit by a radioactive bunny.

Some good supporting casting to note: Steve Buscemi, Ray Liotta, Fred Willard, and Zach Galifianakis (though Zach is sadly underused, as he was in Up in the Air. Here, he basically plays a slob with a beard. Talk about typecasting.) But it's a testament to Zach's rising star power that both YiR and UitA misleadingly featured him in ads. He's the buzz boy right now after his cannonball splash onto the public radar in last year's The Hangover. That was Todd Phillips' latest stake (after Road Trip and Old School) to the claim of best mainstream comedy director.

While that's not an actual thing, if anyone could be said to have held that title, it would be Harold Ramis. Proof? Caddyshack, Vacation, Groundhog Day. It's almost poetic that his latest film, Year One, came out the same month as The Hangover. Year One felt like a holdover from Ramis' prime in the 80s. The jokes were DOA, the tone was flat, and it felt more like a string of gags than a fully developed story. That can work and has worked, but you really need to be at the top of your comedic game to pull it off. Mainstream comedy is a tough genre to survive--you have to be equally funny to people with actual senses of humor and also the rest of the idiots out there. It's a small window. Phillips has missed twice already (Starsky & Hutch and School for Scoundrels, though blame Ben Stiller's ego for the former).

The two movies also may have marked the passing of a second torch. Year One's Jack Black seems to have hit the funny wall. Though him hitting a wall might be more entertaining than some of his recent movies. H-Wood is a fickle town and he better watch his back because Zach is the same age, has the same look, but is still the cheaper option. Just saying. Next up for both: Black has Gulliver's Travels this Christmas in what looks to be his attempt to tap into the Night at the Museum market; Zach has Phillips' Due Date with Robert Downey Jr. this fall.

Oh, Jack Black's Year One co-star? Michael Cera. Playing Michael Cera dressed like a caveman.

2 comments:

  1. Single Malt CinemobsessedSun Jun 27, 02:19:00 PM

    I'm gonna read this post later because I'd hate for your Cera snubbing attitude to influence my reaction to the film. I probably won't get around to it for several years though, so I'm gonna print the blog out and put it in my SMC time capsule.

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  2. Way to guess wrong, SMOC (welcome back, btw).

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