After
several disappointing comedies, both artistically
and commercially ("Me, Myself & Irene,"
"Shallow Hal," "Stuck on You"),
the Farrelly brothers are back on terra firma with
"The Heartbreak Kid," their consistently
funny, occasionally witty remake of the 1972 comedy,
starring Charles Grodin, whose role is now played
by the gifted comedian Ben Stiller.
The film premiered to favorable response at the 2007
Deauville Film Fest (which specializes in American
films, mostly indies), and DreamWorks/Paramount will
release it stateside on October 5. Commercially, it
may not reach the bonanza figures of Stiller's previous
comedy, "Night at the Museum" (which grossed
worldwide $600 million!), but I have no doubts that
it will be popular with young and middle-aged audiences,
particularly those unfamiliar with the original picture.
It's noteworthy, that "Heartbreak Kid"
is the first Farrelly picture which is R-rated since
"Me, Myself & Irene," back in 2000,
thus permitting the directors to go wild and make
a more adult sex comedy, without fearing the censors'
wrath.
This is the second good update of a classic film,
following the Western "3:10 to Yuma" (a
remake of the 1957 oater), showing that remakes of
old good films could result in good films, if they
are handled by the right director, scribe, and stars,
which this "Heartbreak Kid" certainly does.
The 1972 film was directed by Elaine May and centered
on a romantic triangle of Charles Grodin and Jeannie
Berlin (May's daughter), as the (very) Jewish couple,
and a Waspish shiksa, played by the young Cybill Shepherd
as the desirable woman who disrupts the marriage during
the honeymoon. With sufficient references to the original
film to merit the label remake, this "Heartbreak
Kid" is also entertaining in its own right. It's
marked by mostly intelligent dialogue and off-the-wall
situations that aretolerable in comedies and thus
make tge pictuyre enjoyable from start to finish.
Quite
ingeniously, while maintaining the original concept,
the Farrellys and their writers, Scott Armstrong and
Leslie Dixon, have made some crucial changes. First,
they changed the locale. The 1972 picture, which playwright
Neil Simon scripted, was set in New York, with the
couple honeymooning in Florida, hence placing the
couple in two Jewish-flavored sites. In contrast,
the new comedy is set in San Francisco, sending the
couple to a foreign country for their bliss, Mexico,
thus adding some cross-cultural flavor as well.
But more important is the change of the protagonists'
looks and personality. While Stiller still plays a
Jewish boy, domineered by his father (embodied by
Stiller's real-life dad Jerry Stiller in a casting
coup), this feature has reversed the female types.
If the 1972 film was based on the notion of "Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes," the new one opts for "Gentlemen
Prefer Brunettes."
With the patented, over-the-top Farrelly humor, this
outrageous comedy also relies on profanity (there's
a good share of hair-raising one-liners), shocking
sight gags (though nothing like the flying sperm in
"There's Something About Mary"), and outlandish
antics, piled on a twisted comedy of errors.
Again inspired by Bruce Jay Friedman's story (which
served as the basis for the 1972 film), this comedy
is about a man who falls in love with another woman
just days after his own wedding. Who's this man? Eddie
Cantrow (Stiller), a fortysomething athletic goods
emporium owner, is a bachelor under increasing pressures
from his father Doc (Jerry Stiller) and best friend
Mac (Rob Cordry) to find the right woman and tie the
knot. Is Eddie too picky about women, just insecure,
fearful of commitment to one femme?
Opportunity
knocks, when a chance encounter with an alluring blonde,
Lila (Malin Akerman, hailing from Sweden) leads to
a pleasant affair. Lila is impressed with Eddie's
interruption of her mugging on Van Ness, a busy San
Francisco street. A whirlwind romance follows and
Eddie proposes in haste, rather impulsively. However,
right after the wedding, as the newlyweds get to know
each other while driving down the California Coast,
Eddie begins to suspect that he might have made a
huge, terrible mistake.
Reversing some gender stereotypes, the film depicts
Lila as a foul-mouthed woman with a trucker's rather
than lady's vocabulary, and blessed (or cursed) with
an insatiable appetite for sex in all kinds of hilariously
athletic positions. The Farrellys play a nasty joke
here on jocks and their limited sexual repertoire.
Refuting Eddie's allegations, dad Doc says, "You
think your wife's a nutcase, just because on your
honeymoon in a tropical paradise, she's singing a
lot, wanting to have sex around the clock, and accidentally
gets too much sun?" Indeed, quite conveniently
for all concerned, Lila's sunburn confines her to
their hotel suite, allowing Eddie free time and energy
to engage in his fantasies and escapades
Making things worse is another chance encounter at
the exotic Mexican resort of Cabo, this time with
Miranda (Michelle Monaghan), who's attending a reunion
with her South-based family. An appealing brunette,
Miranda seems to be the opposite of Lila. A cool high-school
teacher she's down to earth, grounded, and wholesome;
she seems more "normal" than the flighty
and needy Lila. Being more of his speed and on the
level--sort of the ideal girl-next-door--means that
Eddie can communicate with Miranda and be more relaxed
without extra effort or the usual pretense.
But afraid of losing what he sees at the girl of
his dreams, Eddie neglects to tell Miranda or her
relatives that he's not single. From that point on,
the Farrelly's romp takes its anti-hero to extremities
in human conduct, throwing him in one hilariously
impossible situation after another.
Dealing
with racial stereotypes (Jewish versus WASPs) and
sharp social hierarchy, May's film was misunderstood
by some critics, who claimed that her comedy was "anti-Semitic,"
because most of the characters had "negative"
Jewish traits. Times have changed, and the Farrellys
know that race and ethnicity are not as crucial factors
in social life as they were three decades ago.
However, social class, lifestyle, and manners do
count at present. And, indeed, the filmmakers show
how Eddie is initially determined to be less vulgar
or coarse than his Las Vegas-loving father, who is
not above talking about "pussy" and "snatch"
when describing female anatomy.
Miranda's Mississippi relative Martin (Danny McBride)
plays the equivalent role that Eddie Albert played
in 1972, except that he's now her cousin rather than
her irascible WASPish father, as was the case in May's
picture. Other secondary characters include a Portuguese
hotel worker, "Uncle Tito" (played by the
excellent comedian Carlos Mencia), a free-spirited
eccentric (sporting a strange wig and huge moustache)
at the idyllic resort, who with energy and bravado
gets right into the midst of chaos of false identities
and misunderstandings. The Farrellys are using Tito's
character to healthily deconstruct what could be described
as "Mexican flavor."