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MACGRUBER
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And their deadpan sidekicks and foils are usually shown they're more than capable agents in their fields in spite of their methods. And throughout the grueling ninety minute run time, this shtick is repeated over and over ad nauseum, while jokes that work on mere occasions, are doled out as frequently as the writers can manage without testing the patience of their audience. As for folks like Ryan Phillipe and Powers Boothe, they look bored half the time playing second banana to a barely talented Will Forte whose own sense of bravado is as forced as his comic shtick. If he even has one. Val Kilmer looks as if he's lost all hope, especially when carrying dialogue better than Forte hopes to. The rest of the film is centered around sight gags that are dead on arrival and the implementing of heavy eighties soundtrack that is supposed to be some form of comedy, I'm assuming. I never quite understood why during a sight gag we heard eighties music blasting over the soundtrack. Most times I wasn't even sure if this film was set in the eighties, or if Macgruber was simply a man stuck in the eighties. If the latter, then it only further proves my point that he's merely a derivation and flat out plagiarism of Austin Powers. Sans the laughs. And genius. And creativity. And originality. Oh look, they're over explaining another joke!
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