Saturday, August 21, 2010

Date Night (2010)

Format: DVD

Date Night (2010). Tina Fey and Steve Carell are two of probably the most charming performers in entertainment these days. Their goofy attractiveness can make them a ideal few in Date Night: an unremarkable husband and wife from New Jersey, they get mistaken for crooks in Manhattan, sending them on the wild night replete with snooty wait staff, crooked cops, glitter-specked strippers, a shirtless superspy, along with a preposterous vehicle chase.

The film can make no work to become remotely plausible and also the final third truly goes off the rails, and it would most likely be much better served by much less familiar faces in minor roles. It is disappointing that the dialogue does not crackle the way it does on 30 Rock or even the Workplace. But Fey and Carell carry the film together via sheer nerdy pluck.

Hardly ever does a few inside a film appear genuinely devoted to every other, not out of wild passion, but for all of the points that an actual marriage is constructed on: patience, shared humor, a willingness to cope with day-to-day annoyances, and basic affection. Fey and Carell appear like a few you'd really appreciate heading out to dinner with. In today's globe, that's much more romantic than sunsets and bouquets of roses.


Tina Fey and Steve Carrell are excellent in this frantic comedy

In order for a film packed full of unlikely plot-developments and general silliness like DATE NIGHT, a cast that's easy to love who have razor sharp comic timing and mastery of their tone is needed. Fortunately, Steve Carrell and Tina Fey meet all three requirements, and thus, DATE NIGHT works on many levels.

Carrell and Fey play a nearly middle aged married few with kids. They have a comfortable suburban life, and are still fond of every other, but they are also clearly just a bit worn out by life. "Date Nights" for them consist of heading to a local steak restaurant, with worn-out décor and no sense of romance whatsoever. And in time-honored, clichéd tradition, they wonder if they are still in-love with the other, because they see their closest friends getting divorced.

I hate the way Hollywood likes to make us think that no long term marriage could possibly still be happy and fulfilling. True, raising a family and nurturing a career and paying bills and time do take their toll...but mature couples embrace those points. They don't shake their heads with regret over the wild and crazy times they may have missed.

Anyway, I clearly digress. One day, Carrell decides to shake points up just a bit, and invites his wife to go "into the city" to try out a hot new restaurant they've heard of. Naturally, when they arrive, with no reservations, they are treated with withering disdain by the staff...but Carrell hangs in there, and when the name "Tripplehorn" is repeatedly called by the hostess to no avail, Carrell declares that he and his wife are the Tripplehorns and they are seated and begin to appreciate a lovely evening with each other.

Then they are approached by a few of thuggish men, who escort them to the alley and begin to rough them up, because apparently the actual Tripplehorns are engaged in blackmail, and they are being hunted by some bad men. Thus, Carrell and Fey embark on the pretty wild and crazy Date Night...one in which many silly moments of physical comedy happen to them and equally as many unlikely plot twist.

If you're heading to see this film for a coherent crime drama about two amateurs who foil a crime syndicate...you'll be disappointed. But if, like 99.99% from the people attending, you're hoping for some good laughs and high-quality banter...you'll be mostly pleased, Carrell & Fey deliver and then some. Although these two performers have not truly worked with each other before, they both share a past history with Chicago's famed Second City Improve group, and their comic sensibilities blend with each other quite nicely. They can take some pretty mundane writing, and produce some remarkable laughs.

While I won't go so far as to say that Carrell and Fey are clearly affectionate towards every other...you can certainly see the appreciation for every other's skill on their faces. Carrell, in particular, gets a actual twinkle of delight in his eyes when Fey delivers a great line. There is nothing serious in their performances, but there is a warmth and camaraderie that are infectious.

They are ably assisted by many good cameos, including a hilarious scene with James Franco and Mila Kunis along with a recurring appearance from Mark Wahlberg, who plays a government security consultant who has a lovely apartment and an apparent unwillingness to wear shirts. While Wahlberg isn't truly asked to do a lot except allow Fey and Carrell to react to him...he shows a humor about himself that is often missing in his persona. The invaluable William Finctner shows up later, as does Ray Liotta, playing the character Ray Liotta always does.

The film also features an unlikely but very funny vehicle chase. Your enjoyment of it will greatly depend on your willingness to utterly suspend disbelief, but if you do, it is funny enough to cause a pain in your side. Other moments of physical comedy fall flatter, even when Fey & Carrell are funny, the stuff they are asked to do sometimes isn't. Again, in lesser hands, this film would be nearly intolerably shrill. But in the end, it is a wonderful tribute to the skills of its two stars and while it is not a classic screwball comedy, it's still well worth your time.

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Read My Other Reviews:
- Lee DeWyze New Release 2010
- Clash of the Titans (Blu-ray: 2010)
- Disturbed - Asylum
- Iron Maiden: The Final Frontier

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