MasterChugs Theater: ‘Dinner for Schmucks’

Dinner for Schmucks, directed by Jay Roach and based on a 12-year-old French movie known in English as The Dinner Game, is in some ways an exemplary modern Hollywood comedy. It treads a careful boundary between nasty and sweet, balancing the rude humor of humiliation with an affirming, tolerant, almost scolding final message: Be nice! It dabbles in sexual naughtiness without dreaming of going too far into complicated zones of lust and betrayal.

And, most of all, the film collects a cast of performers who know how to be funny. The success of this movie, following a formula upheld by just about any recent hit comedy you can name, lies as much with supporting players and plot-derailing set pieces as with the central story and characters. Jemaine Clement as a pompous, goatish artist; Zach Galifianakis as an I.R.S. flunky who believes he has the power to control other minds; Lucy Punch as a lovestruck stalker with no control over anything: these are the people who propel the movie on its meandering, offbeat path toward a madly farcical climax followed, inevitably and less happily, by a soft and sentimental dénouement. Continue reading MasterChugs Theater: ‘Dinner for Schmucks’

MasterChugs Theater: ‘The Hangover’

If you’re reading this and haven’t seen The Hangover yet, then I am very disappointed in you. And not in the good way, but in the “Dad’s not mad, just disappointed in you” kind of way.

Go. Leave now. Stop reading this and head to the nearest theater now.

You’re still here, aren’t you. Sigh. Okay, well, if you’re going to persist in this, you might as well read on to find out exactly why you should seeing this movie. Hit the jump for knowledge!  Continue reading MasterChugs Theater: ‘The Hangover’