- Dinner for Schmucks
- OPENING: 07/30/2010
- STUDIO: Paramount Pictures
- RUN TIME: 114 min
- ACCOMPLICES:
Trailer, Official Site
The Charge
Takes One to Know One.
Opening Statement
My reaction upon seeing the Dinner for Schmucks trailer was a blend of pain and pleasure. I like Steve Carell and Paul Rudd, but the premise seemed awfully flimsy. I also experienced a blend of pain and pleasure watching the film itself. To my surprise, the premise actually works, but other elements of the script do a lot of damage to a film boasting a wide variety of entertaining performances.
Facts of the Case
The oddball premise is this: every year, a group of businessmen get together and participate in a special dinner. Each businessman will bring the most idiotic person he can find along to the dinner. At the end of the meal, one of the guests will be awarded a trophy. Ordinarily, Tim (Paul Rudd, I Love You, Man) would be appalled at the concept of participating in such a dinner. However, he’s learned that his participation might just earn him a promotion at the office. Tim hesitates at first, but after he meets the peculiar Barry (Steve Carell, The Office) he cannot help but feel fate is shoving him in a very specific direction. Barry is one of the most spectacularly clueless and unusual men Tim has ever encountered. Barry is an IRS Agent who spends his free time making elaborate dioramas filled with stuffed mice. He has very little useful knowledge and provides those around him with a consistent stream of confidently-delivered misinformation. Tim invites Barry to the dinner, Barry accepts and the battle between Tim’s personal guilt and career ambitions begins.
The Evidence
There’s another battle taking place within the 110-minute running time of Dinner for Schmucks, too: the battle between the talented cast and the pedestrian script. For every funny moment delivered by the film (and there are certainly more than a few), there’s another groan-worthy sequence loaded with clichés and convention. Why, oh why must we endure yet another film in which a guy loses his girlfriend for the entire midsection of a movie due to some terrible misunderstanding that no one makes a real attempt at clearing up? This particular subplot does nothing but pad the film’s running time; had it been clipped the movie would have benefited immensely.
There are also plenty of moments when entertaining comedy will slip so far into broad farce that it stops being funny and starts becoming stupid. Please note the overlong sequence in which Tim’s ex-girlfriend Darla (Lucy Punch, Ella Enchanted) enters the fray, desperately attempting to engage in some over-the-top role play while Tim tries to speak to his girlfriend on the phone. I wanted to toss something at the screen. The same could be said of a scene in which Tim’s important business lunch is interrupted by the aforementioned Darla. You sense a theme, but I promise that Ms. Punch’s performance isn’t the problem; it’s just that she’s been given the worst scenes to work with.
Despite these problems, it’s easy to imagine many leaving Dinner for Schmucks with a smile on their face, as the film starts strong, ends well and contains a lot of delightful bits in-between. There’s some amusing corporate satire wiggling around in the background of the film, as Tim’s assorted superiors (including Ron Livingstone of the excellent corporate satire Office Space) are essentially depicted as a group of frat boys in suits, using their wealth and power to fund elaborate yet juvenile pranks. The group is led by Lance Fender, who is played by Bruce Greenwood (Star Trek). Greenwood is a reliable actor but deceptively versatile; he can play hollow corruption and warm sincerity with equal conviction. He’s called upon to do the former in this instance and does a fine job of it.
Paul Rudd and Steve Carell do an excellent job in the lead roles, even if we’ve seen shades of these performances elsewhere. Rudd’s turn is the same sort of exasperated everyman he’s patented at this point, though once again it’s refreshing to see that Rudd’s straight man portraits are just as funny as many of the “comic relief” characters that accompany him. Speaking of which, Carell may have a physical appearance and a general persona quite similar to Sandra Bullock’s spectacularly unsuccessful turn in last year’s All About Steve, but he makes it work. Unlike Bullock, Carell seems fully committed to his portrait of a loon, never second-guessing any of the wild antics he’s called upon to carry out. It’s essentially an exaggerated compilation of Michael Scott’s dumbest moments, but it works.
For me, the biggest laughs came from the supporting players. Zach Galifinakis (who has recently been cast in every single comedy being released over the course of the next two years) turns in good work as a co-worker of Barry’s who believes he is a hypnotist. Talented folks like Kristen Schaal (Flight of the Conchords), Larry Wilmore (The Daily Show), Chris O’Dowd (The I.T. Crowd) and others generate laughs in smaller parts. The best supporting player is Jermaine Clement (of Flight of the Conchords fame) whose portrait of a pretentious artist is a consistent source of off-the-wall delight. Clement has a way of stealing the show in everything he appears in; here’s hoping we continue to see a lot more of him in the years to come.
Closing Statement
There are certainly a lot of funny moments in Dinner for Schmucks, which is what one hopes a comedy will provide. Alas, there are also simply too many moments that misfire for me to really recommend the film without reservation. I laughed, I winced, I smiled and I sighed. Bearing that in mind, I can only advise you to attend this dinner at your own risk.
The Verdict
6/10
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