Posts Tagged ‘Jack Black’

 

Tropic Thunder

Jack Black & White Minstrel Show

August 30th, 2008

tropicthunder

With “Tropic Thunder” triple-threat Ben Stiller is inching closer to a work befitting the eviscerating talent of “The Ben Stiller Show,” his scything skit show which Fox deigned to broadcast for a measly 12 episodes in the fall of 1992.   Filled with brutal parody and sharp yet sophomoric satire in sketches such as “Ask Manson,” “Tito Gallegos, The Pig Latin Lover,” and “TJ O’Pootentoot,”  the show’s sensibility seems a far cry from Stiller’s recent resume where he has spent too much time playing the befuddled every guy in other folks’ half-hearted efforts such as  “Meet the Fockers,” “Along Came Polly,“ “Night at the Museum,“ and “The Heartbreak Kid.“ Even Stiller’s last directorial effort — “Zoolander”  — felt both as a film and performance like a bit of a sleepwalking exercise. So, it’s encouraging that as director and co-screenwriter he’s added a bit more nuance and bite to his comic creations in one of this year‘s more notoriously talked about films.  

At times discomfitingly funny, “Tropic Thunder” follows a troupe of self-obsessed actors filming a Vietnam War opus on location in Southeast Asia who anger their director and producer so thoroughly that they are unwittingly dropped into the jungle to teach them a quick lesson. Suddenly, events conspire to maroon the quintet led by Tugg Steadman (Stiller), a preening action hero grasping for greater depth in his career.  

Beginning with savagely clever and inspired parody trailers of each of the actor’s seminal work, “Tropic Thunder” is an equal opportunity offender. Almost every sector of society is mocked. (Don’t worry Kazakhstan, you’re spared this time.) But Hollywood is the bull’s-eye target, with the industry’s penchant for honoring actors for portraying people with disabilities earning particular scrutiny. You will swear you’ve seen Stiller in “Simple Jack.”

In the role of five-time Oscar winning Australian method actor, Kirk Lazarus, who undergoes skin pigmentation surgery to play African-American Sergeant Lincoln Osiris,  Robert Downey Jr.  delivers a performance for the ages. Forgetting the brazen courage to attempt the part, what about the chops? He exhibits immense dexterous talent by portraying a black man who is completely self realized and devoid of caricature. Somewhere C. Thomas Howell is bowing his head in shame.

Future editions of Eila Mell’s “Casting Might-Have-Beens” won’t be troubled by stories of the various actors Stiller would have had in mind for the role. It had to be Downey or bust. He’s so good you begin to wonder, “What can’t he tackle?”  The Michael Phelps Story?  A live-action Cartman, Kyle and Kenny? “The Queen”?  In 2008, Downey’s work has been so exemplary that perhaps next spring the Academy should bestow a best supporting nomination on his close friend, personal assistant and “sponsor,” Jimmy Rich.  There’s more to come from the iron man later this year as he costars with Jamie Foxx in Joe Wright’s anticipated drama, “The Soloist.” I wouldn’t bet against a trifecta. As to the future, he’ll appear on screens in 2010 as Sherlock Holmes in a Guy Ritchie project, thereby snatching the director’s career from oblivion.

Jack Black, so unselfconsciously demented in the under-the-radar and underappreciated “Be Kind Rewind,” leavens the outrageousness with a muted turn as Jeff Portnoy, a drug-addled comic actor who bears a faint resemblance to Chris Farley.  However, Black bursts out of this cocoon in a detox scene which is brutal, gut-busting and instantly quotable.

Aside for the main trio, the expansive cast  performs with varying degrees of success. Brandon T. Jackson, as rapper Alpa Chino, and Jay Baruchel, as earnest young actor Kevin Sandusky, are welcome additions to the cast-adrift actors. Matthew McConaughey as Tugg’s agent displays charm and comic timing with such aplomb that you hope he will fire his own, expand his repertoire and stop making foolish films with that Wasa of actresses, Kate Hudson.

As the author of the film’s war-time memoir, Nick Nolte is so grizzled you’d think he’d supped on a dinner of Sam Elliott and Eli Wallach. Danny McBride, the flavor of the month, doesn’t do much with his pyrotechnics wizard role and you ponder if the buzz about this dude might be bong induced. Similarly, Steve Coogan feels slightly underutilized as the film’s put-upon director. But Tom Cruise clearly revels in the raunchy role of the film’s megalomaniacal producer with a look suggesting a homicidal James Lipton. He also sports the gnarliest hand hair in recent screen memory.

In a bit of deflating news, according to reports, Stiller and Cruise are teaming up in “The Hardy Men,” updating the Parker Stevenson and Shaun Cassidy pairing to adulthood. It sounds like a “Focker” nightmare so unless there’s an inspired twist to this scenario, I fear that in his career we will only see the comic best that Stiller can conjure in fleeting snippets. If true, he‘ll justifiably become “The Heartbreak Kid.”


Kung Fu Panda

Haiku Fidelity

August 28th, 2008

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The grandest asset of “Kung Fu Panda” is its greatest pitfall. Jack Black dominates as the title character and he’s undeniably terrific but his presence is so overpowering that he suffocates the film. 

When a comedian becomes iconic like Black, the humor begins to emanate from familiarity. The rhythm of his voice, the cadence of his delivery, and his bountiful physical exuberance can lead an audience to laugh in anticipation even before Black has delivered a punch line.  In “High Fidelity” Black captivated with his manic energy and people became instant fans of the dynamo with the soulful pipes in one of the films of the 2000s.  Since then Black’s tenacious persona has become a distinctly beloved comic presence. “The School of Rock” could have been a cringe-worthy exercise with a lead who brought less commitment and belief to the role of Dewey Finn. A recent Sesame Street appearance made a lesson about octagons a winsome moment. And as illustrated in DreamWorks’ “Kung Fu Panda,“ no one says “Awesome” with the same joyous verve.  

So you can’t blame directors Mark Osborne and John Stevenson for making a film which is essentially a Jack Black vehicle. But it’s a glaring example where moderation would have been a wiser option, and a less-is-more approach may have ensured a more complete and resonating work. 

“Kung Fu Panda” opens on a vibrant, teeming Chinese city reminiscent of a scene from Richard Scarry’s “Busy, Busy World” but the film falters as the focus turns to Black‘s lovable yet hapless panda, Po.  The film feels smaller and less robust than several recent animated wonders, especially the studio’s own “Flushed Away.” The other characters lack true distinction and are lumped into a not-Jack Black pack. They simply aren’t given the personality or pizzazz of Po. Secondary characters feel, well, secondary. Furthermore, the script wavers in quality and relies all-too-often on trite aphorisms.  

The makers of “Kung Fu Panda” should have studied the efforts of those quality animated films and noticed they haven’t allowed a single vocal talent to dominate.  You would have to be well coached to know that Craig T. Nelson was the voice of Mr. Incredible.  And few would have recognized instantly that the lead actors in “Flushed Away” were Hugh Jackman and Kate Winslet.  And just last year “Ratatouille” utilized Patton Oswalt’s talents but the tremendous stand-up’s distinct comic persona doesn’t begin to overwhelm. It simply melds into a larger, luxurious tale.

 “Kung Fu Panda” is enjoyable and you’d have to be a surly curmudgeon to dismiss its charming moments.  But making Black the whole focus creates an unbalanced film that is something short of “Awesome.“