Saturday, April 11, 2009

Seth Rogen: Mall Cop


I saw "Observe and Report" last night and I honestly thought it was funny as hell. There are several reviewers who don't agree with me but I think it's because most of the people reviewing this movie are not apart of the target audience. I'll agree that this film has several vulgar, inappropriate moments and a gratuitous use of the F-bomb (gratuitous may be too weak of a word in this case), but I believe it's fair to compare it to "Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film For Theaters."
Aqua Teen
Let me explain.
When "Aqua Teen" hit theaters, I saw it with my friends and loved it. My friends and I are fans of the show and we got all of the jokes in the film. The next morning, when Jeffrey Lyons and Alison Bailes reviewed it on their show "Reel Talk," they ripped it apart because they thought it wasn't funny. Of course they thought it wasn't funny! Neither one of them had ever seen the show so they obviously didn't get the movie. How is this similar to "Observe?" Lyons and Bailes weren't apart of the demographic "Aqua Teen" was aimed at and they aren't apart of the demographic "Observe" is aimed at. Actually, they hated "Observe," with Bailes calling it "not a comedy" and Lyons saying it's "mean-spirited" and "never funny." This film is so apparently aimed at teenagers and at twenty-somethings, not at middle-aged film critics.
Another problem with the critics is how they all typecast Seth Rogen. On "Reel Talk," Lyons continuously states that this beardless Rogen is not funny and "is a different kind of actor." I was quite relieved to see a Rogen part that wasn't a stoner. We've seen enough of that. It's shameful to typecast actors but this particular instance angers me because when "Fred Claus" (a movie I thoroughly enjoyed) came out, Bailes stated that she was unhappy with Vince Vaughn's performance and he would have been better off in a raunchier role. Lyons proceeded to tell her she was typecasting him and that "we don't need another 'Bad Santa.'" Now, Lyons is typecasting Rogen and no one says a word to deny him. They do state that it's good for him to try to expand his choice in roles, but simply mentioning this unnecessary observance is uncalled for.
My final qualm about the reviews also stems from "Reel Talk." Lyons mentions his disgust about seeing the flasher and believed it was unnecessary to show him. In the case of nudity, there is only one scene in which a topless woman is shown. The rest of the nudity is full-frontal manhood. It's about time films had equal opportunity nudity. In other words, if a naked person needs to be shown, show a naked person of the opposite sex later in the movie. Bailes mentions "seeing the flasher naked" is "the only funny part of the film" and I halfway agree: it was definitely funny, but not the only funny part of the film.
I don't wish to write a long review of this film in the same way I did for "Watchmen," but I will justify my accusations. This film is not for everybody and I can guarantee that everyone will be offended by something in it. However, I think a line from MSN's review of the film sums it up very well: "It's a strong, strange comedy that goes for the funny bone and the jugular." It is violent at some points and, as stated before, profanity-laden to the extreme, so, like "Watchmen," it's not for the kiddies. But, if you can tolerate all of that and find the humor both in the suggestive material and past it (yes, if examined deep enough, there IS a humorous, underlaid meaning), you will enjoy this movie. Rogen's character is both likeable and loathable at the same time and his cringe-worthy comments serve only to make him seem more realistic. That's the main problem with all of these critics' reviews: they all mulled over the language, offended by it to the extreme. I have said the same thing for years now every time a critic cries over profanity: THAT'S HOW PEOPLE TALK. And, in the case of this movie and its motley crew cast of characters (Anna Faris' bimbo, Ray Liotta's exasperated detective, Celia Weston's drunk mother), that's how people act. At times, Rogen does come across as mean-spirited, but we would all be lying if we said that we never knew anyone in our lives that was like that. This film manages to take the gross-out comedy genre and give it characters that make the audience laugh with their over-exaggerated depictions of real life and real people, while also creating such an extreme of absurdity that saves it from being a social commentary (I loved this movie, but I would never be foolish enough to call it that). It's not wrong to root for Rogen, even if you feel dirty at times for doing so. That's the point.
Seth Rogen
On a final note, the audience I was surrounded with last night consisted almost completely of the target demographic. And do you know what they were doing the whole movie? Laughing. Laughing, laughing, laughing. The critics' reviews will not dictate the success of this movie. It will be all of the young people who saw its opening and then go and recommend it to their young friends because it's funny, it's raunchy, and it makes you forget the world for an hour and a half, just as a movie should.
Here is the full review from MSN:
http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-critic-reviews/observe-and-report/#Review_0
And I used to have the Reel Talk review on here, but since the show has been cancelled, the review has disappeared from the internet. You can just take my word for it, right?

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