Genre: Comedy
Director: Harold Ramis
Cast: Jack Black, Michael Cera, Oliver Platt,
David Cross, Hank Azaria, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Vinnie
Jones, Juno Temple, Olivia Wilde, June Raphael, Horatio Sanz
RunTime: 1 hr 36 mins
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: NC-16 (Brief Nudity and Some Sexual
References)
Official Website: http://www.yearone-movie.com/
Opening Day: 27 August 2009
Synopsis:
When
a couple of lazy hunter-gatherers (Jack Black and Michael
Cera) are banished from their primitive village, they set
off on an epic journey through the ancient world in Columbia
Pictures' comedy "Year One." Harold Ramis directs.
The screenplay is by Harold Ramis & Gene Stupnitsky &
Lee Eisenberg ("The Office") from a story by Harold
Ramis. The film is produced by Judd Apatow, Harold Ramis,
and Clayton Townsend.
Movie Review:
“Year One” sounds like a concept made in comedy
heaven- take two Paleolithic hunter-gatherers Zed and Oh (well,
Zed is the hunter with a wayward spear and Oh is the gatherer
who talks to his berries), put them through a couple of Biblical
encounters done the Monty Python way and cast the very-funny-if-you-like-his-thing
Jack Black and the always-shy-and-sweet Michael Cera as Zed
and Oh respectively.
What’s
more- surround them with a ensemble supporting cast including
Oliver Platt, Hank Azaria, David Cross and the uncredited
Paul Rudd; the now-“It” producer of comedies Judd
Apatow; and the director responsible for some of the most
memorable ‘80s comedies “Ghostbusters” and
“Caddyshack”, Harold Ramis. What’s there
not to be excited about?
But
if you’re guessing this reviewer sounds less enthused
than he should be, you’re right. “Year One”
is not without its inspired moments, but its whole is distinctly
less than the sum of its parts. Indeed, what “Year One”
sorely lacks is a coherent story that can sustain its creative
premise, something that would make it more than a series of
Biblical-tale spoofs strung together on the feeblest of plot
strings.
Sure,
seeing Cain fervently trying to deceive his family (despite
numerous slips of the tongue) that he did not stone his brother
Abel to death is amusing. Just as how watching Abraham foolishly
believe that the barrel-bellied Zed is a sign from God not
to sacrifice his son Isaac is hilarious. But amidst the circumcision
jokes, the “Sin City” Sodom references and not
forgetting the obligatory fart jokes, “Year One”
really doesn’t have much of a tale to tell.
To
take it from one sketch to another, it uses the bare-bones
story of Zed and Oh on a quest to prove Zed’s destiny
as “The Chosen One”- thanks to a revelation Zed
has after eating the “Forbidden Fruit” from the
“Tree of Knowledge”. Yes, this journey is a mere
excuse to give all those Old Testament tales a wild, irreverent
spin. And that strategy works better in the first half of
the movie, where most of the movie’s best bits are found
(some of which can already be seen in the trailer).
But
“Year One” really begins to meander about the
halfway mark as Zed and Oh reach said town of Sodom (that’s
the city with more whores, Abraham tells them). By then, writers
Harold Ramis, Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg have almost
run out of ideas, resorting instead to fake-idol worship,
virgin sacrifice, and sexually-dubious eunuchs and high-priests
among other desperate attempts, to wring some laughs before
it all peters out.
It
doesn’t help that Jack Black and Michael Cera share
little chemistry with each other. Set up like a trademark
Apatow male buddy comedy, Black and Cera unfortunately share
none of that male-male chemistry that other Apatow movies
possess in generous portions. Most of the time, Black and
Cera are simply doing their own thing; and while they are
still funny, the lack of any comedic synergy between them
wastes an otherwise nice pairing of opposites.
Indeed,
the assembly of talent in “Year One” naturally
sets itself and its audience up for more. But its payoff comes
in stops and starts, hits and misses, until it limps to a
messy and ultimately disappointing finish. Like our ancestors
have taught us, it’s not good enough to have a smart
idea; you have to work hard at it to make it right- “Year
One” ignores that lesson to its own demise.
Movie
Rating:
(Our Ancestors have the right to be funnier than this
stitched up comedy of Biblical spoofs)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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