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Joe Scheffer is an honest workaday man who
loves his daughter. One day while driving to work with his daughter
Natalie he gets harshly humiliated by a bigger man in
the parking lot. After feeling embarrassed, he decides to prove himself to his
daughter and begins taking karate lessons with a washed up action star Chuck Scarett to seek revenge
on the bully. But after a while, he begins to wonder if fighting is the best way
to solve the problem and if being a man means fighting or just being an honest
man to the people that matter in life. Comedies, family comedies especially are very lame if not
predictable nowadays, so it was a treat watching an original one like this.
I'm
a big fan of Tim Allen and many of his movies and it was a surprise that this
would turn out to be a decent movie. I felt bad for him how he's humiliated in
front of his daughter yet he never really fights back. Patrick Warburton is good
in his small but rather important role as Mark the bully. The thing I like about
Tim Allen is, he rarely ever makes a bad movie. Even his worst movie is still
just satisfactory. The best parts of the movie are the exchanges of dialogue
between Belushi and Allen as they train for the big fight in the end of the
movie. The scenes are hilarious and I found myself laughing aloud through many
of them. I really enjoyed the romantic scenes between Allen and Bowen and most
of all, the most enjoyable part of the movie is the realistic ending where we
see the big showdown with Allen and Warburton. I think you'll be pleasantly
surprised by it.
The problem with this is, the movie is
predictable. I know every plot-twist and every character development throughout
the movie, so nothing really came to a surprise to me except the ending. The
movie is cheesy with occasional moments of fluff, but it's not completely hard
to take.
All in all, this is a decent movie with a
great story and a great moral for all the viewers: Violence isn't always the
answer, and sometimes it's best to just walk away. It takes a strong person to
forgive and forget, and most of all, some things in life aren't worth fighting
for.

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