Townhall...
When
the Plot Is Runny
By Brent Bozell
7/29/2011
They
say the movie theaters make more
money on popcorn, candy and soft drinks than they do on the movie
tickets. If
that’s true, theater owners really ought to reconsider the previews
they’re
airing. They can make you sick to your stomach.
I
don’t know why Hollywood moviemakers
are so fascinated with flatulence and excrement. It’s become almost an
obsession, a formality of sorts in the “humor” oeuvre.
Watching
a recent preview of the
forthcoming movie “The Change-Up” is bad enough when you consider the
plot --
two men mysteriously switch bodies, and just how many times will they
beat this
horse to death? One is an uptight lawyer and family man, and the other
a
foul-mouthed slacker and relentless womanizer. Aha! The womanizer will
be
presented with the opportunity to have sex with another man’s wife!
Genius!
There’s
nothing original here, so
enter Flatulence and Excrement. Just as the womanizer prepares to take
the
family man’s place in the marital bed -- remember, any child in a movie
theater
can watch these previews -- the wife gets a bad case of diarrhea,
complete with
a shot of her sitting on the john, defecating. Oh, but there’s more.
She then
gets into the bed and backs up to her faux husband. Naturally, the
disgusted
womanizer exclaims, “Don’t back that thing up into me!” Har, har!
This
qualifies as a preview, a
snapshot of the best this movie has to offer. Even if you find it
funny, why
must it be in the previews, where it can -- and certainly will -- gross
out the
majority of unsuspecting viewers?
That’s
not the only scat prank in the
plot. The film opens with the uptight lawyer (played by Jason Bateman)
getting
up with his twin babies to change them -- when he gets a hot blast of
diarrhea
in his mouth. When the late Steve Allen talked about Hollywood sinking
into the
sewer for laughs, he meant so figuratively. Who knew Hollywood would
eventually
go there literally?
Bateman
insists in interviews that he
was so completely excited to star in this series of bathroom grossouts:
“I was
like, wait a second, this is how they’re gonna start? All right, I’m
ready, my
knees are bent, I’m prepared for anything they’re gonna throw at me,
and they
didn’t disappoint. It just kept coming.”
What
else kept coming? Gutter talk in
front of small children was also mandatory. The Huffington Post reports
that
once Bateman’s body is taken over by the foul-mouthed slacker
character, the
film contains “a number of scenes in which he lets out a ferocious slew
of
curses in front of his 6-year-old daughter. ... Bateman, a father
himself, made
sure to finesse those uncomfortable moments.”
Why
would the cursing (and then the
finessing) be necessary? Once again, this is where Hollywood finds the
easy
laughs -- the shock value of scandalizing a kindergartener with
“ferocious”
cursing -- and if a 6-year-old actress has to hear these fusillades of
profanity over and over again during filming, that’s just the price of
doing
business.
Bateman
explains the “finessing”
business thusly: “You spend 20 minutes apologizing to her and her
mother and
another 20 afterward, and then while you’re shooting, you just kind of
let it
fly. She was a great little actress, she got it, she understood the
jokes.” The
child is patted on the head as a “great little actress” for tolerating
all that
garbage talk.
Six
years old.
This
new trend of R-rated summer
comedies really took off with “The Hangover,” last summer’s box-office
surprise, which earned a whopping $467.5 million worldwide to become
the
top-grossing R-rated comedy of all time. (No question, there are points
in that
movie that are laugh-out-loud hilarious.) The streak continued this
spring with
the hit movie “Bridesmaids,” which proved a girl comedy could be just
as
disgusting as a male-centered one. It also contained a stomach-churning
scene
with the bridesmaids in fancy dresses vomiting and getting diarrhea and
going
to the bathroom in “comedic” places -- in one scene, the sink, and in
another,
the middle of heavy traffic.
Pamela
McClintock at The Hollywood
Reporter sounds positively aglow about the new success of R-rated
yukfests.
“Raunch and debauchery are sizzling at the worldwide box office.”
McClintock
insisted. “The collective strength of these R-rated comedies is
unprecedented
and marks a major shift for Hollywood. A decade ago, studios thought
the genre
was washed up.”
You
mean, like ... diarrhea? Har, har!
Read
it at Townhall
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