Genre: Comedy
Director: Adam McKay
Cast: Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Richard
Jenkins, Mary Steenburgen, Adam Scott, Katherine Hahn
RunTime: 1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: M18 (Crude sexual humour and sexual
scene)
Official Website: http://www.stepbrothers-movie.com/
Opening Day: 11 September 2008
Synopsis:
Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly, who last teamed in the box-office
smash Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, now star
in Step Brothers, directed by Adam McKay (Talladega Nights).
In Step Brothers, Ferrell plays Brennan Huff, a sporadically
employed thirty-nine-year-old who lives with his mother, Nancy
(Mary Steenburgen). Reilly plays Dale Doback, a terminally
unemployed fortyyear-old who lives with his father, Robert
(Richard Jenkins). When Robert and Nancy marry and move in
together, Brennan and Dale are forced to live with each other
as step brothers. As their narcissism and downright aggressive
laziness threaten to tear the family apart, these two middle-aged,
immature, overgrown boys will orchestrate an insane, elaborate
plan to bring their parents back together. To pull it off,
they must form an unlikely bond that maybe, just maybe, will
finally get them out of the house.
Movie Review:
In my opinion, Will Farrell hasn't be able to capture the
hilarious magic for an
audience after Talladega Nights, with rather ordinary outings
in Blades of Glory and Semi-Pro, and all 3 being sports related. Perhaps the best
way to break out of a
rut, is to actually consciously move away from this wanting
to make a funny movie
from the sports arena, and teaming up with co-star from Talladega
Nights, John C.
Reilly and director Adam McKay, they headed off in a different
direction, and came
up with Step Brothers.
And
you can't really fault them for trying, but two grown up actors
playing immature
adults? They might have pulled it off, if not for the really
repetitive and whiny
nature of the two characters they play. Both of them star
as grown men who refuse to
move out of their single parent's home, and refusing to grow
up, being kings of
their respective households, enjoying life as it is without
responsibility, spending
time just doing exactly what they enjoy doing, such as working
out the right hand,
and making music in a home made studio. That is, until their
parents meet, fall in
love in 5 minutes, and decide to get married. Hence the title.
There's
nothing really sophisticated about the laughs as they stem
from the usual
sibling rivalry and the drawing of out-of-bound lines that
neither should cross.
Expect the usual from Hollywood comedies these days to be
really vulgar as they
subscribe to that same old Apatow formula with acerbic statements
thrown all over
laced with gratuitous F-words, or if all else fails, there's
always that good ol'
toilet humour with crass sexual anatomy thrown in for good
measure. If these are not
the type of humour you enjoy, then you'll be advised to steer
clear of Step
Brothers. Being one who has a high threshold of tolerance
for these lack of
refinement passing off as humour, even I was hard pressed
to try and find it funny
this time round.
Otherwise,
it contains a rather pro-family story beneath its crazy veneer,
especially when coming from the joining of two independent
families as one unit,
with the sacrifices and compromises that come with such a
union. Mary Steenburgen
and Richard Jenkins play the new parents of Ferrell and Reilly,
and while their long
term retirement plan is to live the good life where they can
literally sail into the
sunset, they have to grapple with figuring out what to do
with two boys, erm, men,
sharing the same home, and worse, the same room where they
can unleash their
nonsensical mayhem from.
There
are quite a number of sub plots in the movie which bloat it
to about 100
minutes, but for the most parts these sub plots are rather
half baked, what with the
playground politics, the brother's realization of their common
interests and their
need to find themselves a career through the setting up of
their dream company.
Scenes play out like skits, and sometimes the ridiculous and
strangely coincidental
portions like their sleepwalking disorder, really pushes things
a little too much
into dreadful boredom. Not to mention the very hastily put
together finale which
dragged on past its welcome, that you can't wait to head toward
the doors, never
mind the coda at the end of the credits roll.
Step
Brothers is strictly for Farrell fans only, if there are still
any left after his recent dismal offerings. Don't expect any
comic genius from this movie, as it dragged its feet from
start to end.
Movie
Rating:
(These brothers really need creatively funny filmmakers to
conceive them properly)
Review by Stefan Shih
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