Genre: Comedy
Director: David Schwimmer
Cast: Simon Pegg, Hank Azaria, Thandie Newton,
Ameet Chana, Dylan Moran
RunTime: 1 hr 41 mins
Released By: Warner Bros
Rating: PG (Some Sexual References)
Official Website: http://www.runfatboyrunmovie.com
Opening Day: 3 April 2008
Synopsis:
Five
years ago Dennis (Simon Pegg) was at the altar about to marry
Libby (Thandie Newton), his pregnant fiancée. He got
cold feet and ran for the hills and he’s been going
in circles ever since. When Dennis discovers Libby’s
hooked up with a high-flying-go-getter Whit (Hank Azara),
he realizes its now or never. He enters a marathon to show
he’s more than a gutter, but then finds out just how
much sweat, strain and tears it takes to change. Nobody gives
him a chance but Dennis knows this is his only hope to be
more than a running joke.
Movie Review:
It’s strange to see Simon Pegg go from subverting clichés
to embracing a film so riddled with them and even more surprisingly,
with his tongue nowhere to be seen near his cheek. Somewhere
along the way, Pegg and his fellow scribe, one of the funniest
people in the world (in my very humble opinion), Michael Ian
Black forgot that they started writing a parody of rom-com/underdog/sports
films and instead just went through the motions of making
yet another trite and thoroughly conventional feel-good sapfest.
And to be fair to Black, his script was rewritten by Pegg
to take place in London instead of its original Los Angeles
setting and anglicised to follow suit. Take a closer look
and you might see director David Schwimmer’s name nestled
between Pegg and his co-star Thandie Newton.
"Run
Fatboy Run" begins as if it was the day after a Happily
Ever After in an unlikely romantic comedy. Deadbeat Dennis
(Pegg) is moments away from getting married to Lovely Libby
(Newton), a smart and ambitious beauty way above his station
who he’s gotten pregnant. What does a spineless buffoon
do other than run? Literally, away from her, the presiding
minister, friends and family. Six years later, the shame from
that moment of cowardice forms the very fundamentals of Dennis’s
life: unhealthy, insecure, broke, undependable and without
prospects. The one bright spark left over is a cordial relationship
with Libby and a relatively affectionate one with their young
son, Jake (Matthew Fenton). Dennis’s life on the precipice
is shaken when Libby introduces her seemingly perfect new
American boyfriend Whit (Hank Azaria) who’s successful,
financially secure, considerate and ready for a long-term
relationship. Faced with a future without Libby and Jake,
Dennis attempts to prove to those around him that he can follow
through with his promises by running the same marathon as
Whit.
Pegg
gives a strong showing here and shows that he's not only naturally
funny and self-effacing but a decent actor. Schwimmer does
well to frame his shots at Pegg by showing his face and expressions
as he reacts to things around him that he’s shown to
be powerless to control. We start to believe him when he finally
understands that Libby is the love of his life, as opposed
to being someone he hopes to selfishly possess, and in these
very small ways, we get a main character that’s real
enough to root for. Pegg also knows the score when he’s
in his element. He’s fearless when it comes to the paunchy
physicality of the role – the schoolyard chases, the
training montages as he heaves and hos – but is also
verbally adroit enough to deliver some genuine zingers.
Pegg
doesn’t get to have the only laugh here. The film populates
a sleazy best friend, Gordon (Dylan Moran) and an ingratiating
Indian landlord, Mr. Ghoshdashidar (Harish Patel) around Dennis’s
objective of completing the marathon. Moran is a scene-steal
by all regards. He delivers the best lines and is filled with
the unpredictable, wacky comic energy that’s conspicuously
left restrained in the rest of the film. While a riot, Patel
always stays one joke shy from being an offensively stereotype
and slots in well the rest of the cast.
Perhaps
a victim of the rewrite, the film finds its way close to pandering
double takes and uneven characterisations, most conspicuously
in the handling of Whit who’s at once faultless and
perilously villainous at others. The tired scent of mediocrity
rears the closer the film inches towards its hokey pay-off
and you’ve suddenly got a film that’s so much
lesser than the sum of its parts.
Movie Rating:
(Genuinely funny shtick, but painfully banal at times)
Review by Justin Deimen
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