If
the recent breed of Hollywood comedies seem to be filled
with raunchy dialogue, carnal quests and in-your-face
nudity, know that it is no coincidence. They are simply
the hallmarks of a new era of comedy spearheaded by
Judd Apatow, an era of R-rated irreverent comedies filled
with pot-smoking, sex-obsessed slackers who bond by
sitting around and making fun of each other.
Talk to Judd Apatow and it’s
not hard to understand why. “I always hated it
when people said that the stars of TV and movies should
be handsome, popular guys,” he said in a recent
interview with TimeOut London. “The history of
comedy is full of guys like Buster Keaton and Jerry
Lewis. Who wants to watch a handsome guy who’s
smart? There’s nothing funny in that.”
So Judd Apatow invented the “bromance”,
a style of comedy defined by male (platonic) friendships
between, and among guys, very often in a period of arrested
adolescence. These guys (or geeks) weren’t particularly
handsome or smart- no, they were mostly Average-looking
Joes who just loved to revel in each other’s company.
Since
his breakout hit, “The 40-Year Old Virgin”
(2005), Apatow has religiously championed the rise of
the “bromance” through most, if not, all
his films- those he wrote (e.g. Knocked Up (2007), Walk
Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007), Pineapple Express
(2008)) and those he produced (e.g. Talladega Nights
(2006), Superbad (2007), Step Brothers (2008)).
And
if you need any further proof of his success, just look
at “Role Models” (2008), “I Love You,
Man” (2009) or “Adventureland” (2009).
These are movies that could very easily have been mistaken
as products of the Apatow Productions factory; only
that they are not. Appreciating the merits of his “bromance”
formula, Hollywood has begun copying that distinctive
template, even casting actors from the regular Apatow
stable.
It’s Not Just About the Laughs
If “broman-dies” are just about laughing
at guys who belonged to the slacker class, then you
can very well accuse Apatow
of being callous. But Apatow’s comedies have always
been more than that- they don’t just make you
laugh at the characters within them, they make you laugh
with these characters.
“I’m
trying to show people who need to grow up. Some of it
is hilarious, and some of it is hilarious because it’s
so wrong. But you should be able to make fun of everybody
if your heart is in the right place,” he once
said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.
One
thing you can be sure of- Apatow has always placed his
heart into what he does. Indeed, ever since his 1999
TV series Freaks and Geeks, he has constantly brought
a certain measure of autobiography with him into his
work. “That’s when I started seeing how
being confessional worked,” he said.
In
fact, his latest movie, “Funny People” may
be his most intimate and personal one yet. It tells
the story of George Simmons (played by Adam Sandler),
a comedian who attempts to reevaluate his narcissistic
life after being diagnosed with a fatal disease. In
doing so, Simmons befriends a struggling comic Ira Wright
(Seth Rogen) and pursues a lost love, Laura (Apatow’s
own wife, Leslie Mann)
Apatow
came up with the premise of the movie after a personal
harrowing incident where an earthquake brought down
the ceiling of the master bedroom in his new house just
before he moved in. Besides its premise, the relationships
in the movie also bear a personal origin.
“I tried to make a film that contained everything
that was important to me,” he says. Apatow agrees
that the friendship between George and Ira in the movie
is partly based on his own with comic Garry Shandling
when the former was starting out- only then he was Ira,
and Shandling was George.
It
was Shandling who gave Apatow a big break by hiring
him for five years as a writer on “The Larry Sanders
Show” and Apatow readily credits Shandling as
his mentor. “What I learned on ‘The Larry
Sanders Show’ is this: write about what you care
about and be as truthful as you can. I try to make sure
that whatever I do, even if it’s a really silly
comedy, the people making it are obsessed with it.”
Continue to The Apatow Touch Part Two >
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