Genre: Comedy/Romance
Director: Howard Deutch
Cast: Kate Hudson, Dane Cook, Alec Baldwin,
Jason Biggs, Lizzy Caplan
RunTime: 1 hr 40 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: M18 (Sexual References and Coarse
Language)
Official Website: http://www.mybestfriendsgirlmovie.com/
Opening Day: 25 September 2008
Synopsis:
A master at seducing – and offending – women,
Tank is a professional "My Best Friend's Girl."
When guys get dumped, they hire Tank to take their ex-girlfriends
out on the worst date of their lives – an experience
so horrible it sends them running gratefully back to their
beaus. So when Tank's best friend, Dustin, is dumped by his
new girlfriend, Tank naturally offers to help out... and ends
up meeting the challenge of a lifetime. Smart, beautiful and
headstrong, Alexis is the first girl who knows how to call
his bluff, and Tank soon finds himself torn between his loyalty
to Dustin and his love for his best friend's girl.
Movie Review:
Frat-boy humor and tired romantic comedy clichés do
battle in My Best Friend’s Girl, the schizophrenic Dane
Cook/Kate Hudson vehicle that tries - and fails - to meld
two movie going mindsets into one cohesive comedic package.
The problem isn’t in the performers, per se. While Cook’s
brand of shtick isn’t everyone’s bag, he’s
proven to be a dynamic force for his audience - just not for
Hollywood as of yet. Hudson on the other hand, flounders once
again in a genre setting where she was once a queen of the
screen.
Dustin
(Jason Biggs) is a lovesick stooge who pines daily for his
ex-girlfriend, Alexis (Kate Hudson). Hoping to win her back,
Dustin asks loutish friend Tank (Dane Cook) to take Alexis
out on a hideous date to show her how good she had it when
she spent time with a nice guy. The plan immediately backfires
when Alexis becomes involved with Tank, sending Dustin into
a tailspin where he reconsiders his polite attitude towards
women. Now stuck with a girlfriend, Tank finds he’s
falling in love with Alexis, a perfect contradiction to his
professional lothario ways. As the two try to preserve a relationship,
Dustin grows increasingly disgusted, leading Tank to reconsider
his errant ways.
Whether
or not one is able to find humor in Dane Cook's spastic white-boy
antics, it is now clear that the man was born to play the
role of the asinine romantic. As cynical a purportedly feel-good
romantic comedy has ever been, My Best Friend's Girl fits
the devilish charms of its leading man like a customized glove—or
rather, would appear to. The picture depends completely on
Cook’s whiplash way with a punchline, and if that’s
the only thing propping up the jokes, the audience might as
well pack up and head back home after the opening titles.
Don't get me wrong, Cook can be hilarious. There's simply
a mystified situation with his big screen acting selections.
Cook made up his mind long ago that he wants to be taken seriously
as a leading man but this film is a sort of predictable malarkey
that kills careers; it’s a calculated attempt to woo
the men with genital-based humor and tickle women with some
romantic jousting. The formula has worked before, but Cahan’s
script is a simpleminded effort perfect for anyone who’s
never actually seen a movie before. Misguided and indecisive,
Howard Deutsch's film doesn't know what to do with the pent-up
sexual energy of its cast, Cahan's script first dabbling in
the waters of anti-romantic black comedy before shifting every
one of its gears in preference of something more cuddly and
whitewashed.
This
is one of those movies where supporting players steal the
show. Lizzy Caplan as Alexis' roommate Ami is a tattooed,
raunch-talking party girl in her own mind; Riki Lindhome plays
a Christian high-school teacher whose pure sadness at her
hell-date breaks through both to Turner and the audience;
and single-scene Disney-TV star Andrew Caldwell, blows Cook
away with dead-on trash talk.
Moving
dutifully through the love-triangle-pity motions before jettisoning
Bigg's character almost completely—only to cruelly and
manipulatively bring him back in the end so as to justify
a new course of action—My Best Friend's Girl ultimately
fails to measure up to its own standards, forgoing the genuinely
selfish motivations of its characters for an overly plotted
bowtie conclusion, one that runs at least 20 minutes too long
and, with the exception of a deliciously against-the-current
performance by Alec Baldwin (as Tank's adulterous and incessantly
horny father), commits that most unforgivable of comedy sins:
a dearth of genuine humor.
Movie Rating:
(A recycled white-washed anti-romantic comedy that
just doesn't stand on its own)
Review by Lokman B S
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