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So this is how far
Ben Stiller has come in his years. He went from rather ingenious comedy
in his old FOX show now starring in remakes of romance comedies that try
to break free from the doldrums with over the top sex comedy, and
utterly flat improv with his father who plays (surprise, surprise!) a
wacky outspoken senior citizen. And trying to break from the
conventions, he also pretty much dives head first in to them with
endless montages set to forgettable pop rock, and there's even a prat
fall with a bad stunt double that the Farrelly brothers rely on when
everything Stiller does fails to draw even the slightest of chuckles.
Picking up the slack for him is Rob Corddry as his friend Mac, an
unhappily married man who mocks Eddie at every turn and can't salvage
the lack of charisma or timing Stiller presents; not to mention there's
the obligatory homophobic humor that's just dead on arrival and Mexican
stereotypes aplenty. Eddie is a shallow self-absorbed man now reaching
his forties who is intent on meeting the right woman only because he
wants to basically upstage his ex-fiancé.
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After
a convenient mugging he meets the lovely Lila (Malin Akerman
doing an apparent impression of Drew Barrymore) who seems
like the perfect woman after a roller coaster six weeks (and
three cheesy montages).
She now has
to relocate due to her job and being the rational man he is
that we should all root for, Eddie decides to marry her.
Shocking enough after a six week relationship he discovers
Lila isn't the perfect woman. Lila, while very attractive is
pretty much just a moron which is supposed to be humorous
but comes off as just a desperate grasp to create an
antagonist so we won't despise Eddie when he begins to like
Miranda. |
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Miranda is the opposite to Lila, a dark brunette who
appeals to Eddie after another convenient meeting involving a camera.
She is of course outspoken, a boozer and gutsy so as to entice the
audience and this utter idiot Eddie. The writers anxiously try to keep
Eddie the protagonist, but in reality the only actual sympathetic
character we can enjoy watching is Miranda in spite of the fact that
she's not actually interesting at all. After even more segments
involving Eddie and Miranda's courtship, the weight shifts as Lila
inadvertently goes from villain to victim as Eddie becomes the villain
who seems so superficial he's willing to destroy Lila in spite the fact
that she's an unwitting imbecile. The writers desperately cling to the
notion that Eddie is automatically the hero since it's Stiller, but he's
so despicable at no moment can we ever see his point of view, even when
Lila is at her worst. The rest of "The Heartbreak Kid" revolves around
wacky stunts and horrible over the top outbursts from Stiller, and this
proves the Farrelly brothers have more than overstayed their welcome.
This is a miserable pathetic mean spirited effort on the
Farrelly brothers who continue to squander away any and all potential
for brilliance on Ben Stiller who just hits those flat notes on every
single film he stars in.
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