Fun With Dick and Jane Starring:
Jim Carrey, Téa Leoni, Richard Jenkins, Angie Harmon, Vincent Curatola,
Jacob Davich, Alec Baldwin, Stacey Travis Directed by: Dean Parisot
Released
in the US: Decemer 21st 2005 Released in the UK: Early 2006
Reviewed
by: Sir Dizzy, ZBoneman.com
Dick
and Jane are in love, they're young, they're very successful - pretty much living
the American dream. That is until one morning when they wake up to find they're
living the American nightmare. Everything changes overnight when the enormous
financial corporation that Dick (Jim Carrey) works for becomes involved in an
Enron-like scandal. To make matters just a bit worse, Dick had just the been promoted
to Vice President of Communications just in time to make him the perfect patsy
to pin the rap on. Because of Dick's promotion Jane (Tea Leoni) had just a few
days prior quit her lucrative job with a travel agency, thus our all-American
couple are both unemployed - oh and there's also the silly little matter of Dick's
indictment. Are we having "fun" yet? 
Even
though playing by the rules has left them so financially embarrassed that they
have to take showers in their neighbors lawn sprinklers (because their own lawn
has already been repossessed) - Dick and Jane decide to have another go at making
an honest living. Writer's Judd Apatow (40 Year Old Virgin) and Nicholas Stoller
are masters at blending comedy with pathos as they proved with such ground-breaking
televison work as Freaks and Geeks and Undeclared. They lead Dick and Jane through
a series of hilariously humiliating jobs that wouldn't come close to paying their
bills even if they could hold them down. It's also a testament to the writer's
skill that they are able to make such a convincing case that Dick and Jane really
have no alternative but to pursue a life of crime in order to maintain the style
of life to which they and their son have become accustomed. Thus Dick rationalizes
their newfound Bonnie and Clyde way of life by pointing out that if stealing
was good enough for his bosses, then it's good enough for them. I
have to wonder if over the past twenty years or so if we as the movie going public
have beome less intelligent or is it that the movie studios and executives just
think we have. Dont get me wrong Fun with Dick and Jane is one of the funnier
movies released this year, and it does manage to take some intelligent jabs at
the corporation-crazy world we find ourselves living in. Sadly though, in spite
of it's moments of wit and political smarts, the film really ends up chickening
out, or at the very least selling itself short, by resorting to the more sure-fire,
dumbed-down approach. It just felt to me like a cop-out that they went for the
safe-bet, instead of trying to capture the style of the original. The self-same
thing happened to the recent remake of the Longest Yard, dumb it down, play it
safe and forget about trying to match the intelligence and panache or the original. I
recently had the pleasure of seeing the original Fun with Dick and Jane in preparation
for seeing the remake and Jane Fonda and George Segal had such charm and wit to
them that made the movie marvelously funny without sacrificing one iota of the
the film's stylish intelligence. Tea Leoni and Jim Carrey could have easily pulled
off the same level of charm and grace under pressure, but again the suits decided
to hedge their bets by having Jim Carrey hit the clown button and banking on the
cheap gags and the physical schtick. What's most disheartening about this is that
Carrey has proven that he can make it work without falling back on his trademark
frugging and mugging (see Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind). It's a shame
that they couldn't have stuck to the spirit of the original, because they had
all of the elements in place to have made a much better film here. Leoni is a
perfect choice to play Carrey's counterpart, her timing and deadpan delivery reminded
me a lot of Jane Fonda and I laughed harder at her more subtle one-liners than
Carrey's over-the-top antics. It was her performance that really made the movie.
Alec Baldwin was his usual dependable self and Appatow is arguably the smartest
comic screenwriter in the business. I
hate to leave the impression that this wasn't a hell of a lot of fun - I did laugh
hard, and there were moments of great wit and poignancy - but by aiming the film
at a lower common denominater, the film makers really missed the charm of the
original. Grade:
B
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