Epic Movie (2007) - Movie Review

Jack Aiello
In nature, the monkey expresses boredom, anger and general displeasure by hurling his feces. While watching Epic Movie, I desperately longed to be a monkey. Imagine having the irreproachable honor of chucking a piping stack of excrement, watch it explode Pollock style across the screen, and know that your action did absolutely nothing to mar the quality of what was being viewed. Now that's a chest beater.

Unfortunately, I'm not a monkey, so I'll have to disguise my baser impulses with a thin veneer of civility. By all means, consider this submission a metaphorical fling of my poo. Get ready to duck.

Few movies of this kind provoke my ire, but this one comes closer than any other. The movie, if you can call it such, is a string of skits cobbled together higgledy piggledy for the sole purpose of lampooning various blockbuster movies from recent past. Plot be damned, and the jokes that go with them too.

As far as synopsis goes, the movie revolves around four children from different backgrounds who come together and realize they have a shared destiny. If you think that's a vague, inappropriate plot summary, don't fret; the brainchild behind this swill never cooked the story beyond that sentence either. Basically, you've just been informed about the entire movie. Sorry for the spoiler.

What follows is an 86-minute shoehorning of every possible parody without rhyme, reason, and more importantly, humor. Past movie spoofs like Naked Gun, Airplane, Young Frankenstein, Blazing Saddles, etc, possessed a bizarre, daffy wit. Instead, Epic Movie consists of a horribly awkward X-Men skit that lacks any comic bite. More embarrassing is Crispin Glover as a fey Willy Wonka who performs nonsensical dance moves. Ditto for Keith Carradine's museum curator in the movie's opening skit of The Davinci Code. It's not a parody when the punchline consists of stunt doubles performing pretzel twists. It really shows nothing worth ridiculing about the movie it sets to spoof, and therefore it's not funny. This is an instance where imitation is not the sincerest form of flattery.

At every turn, Epic Movie dumbfounded me with its awful, hackneyed visual gags. As the flatulent lion, Fred Willard's Aslo is locked in combat with another manimal. In the long shots, the movie makes it obvious that there are doubles at work. In close-ups, the stunt actor is clearly Asian to Willard's wrinkly Caucasian self. Funny, but you know what? It's been done before. And better.

It's telling that comedy veterans like Jennifer Coolidge (The White Bitch of Narnia) and Fred Willard couldn't even mine any comic juice from this desert script. Credit Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer for writing (and directing) this greenlit dung pile. Here's a sample line that passes for dialogue:

Susan: We have to get out of here.

Lucy: We have to get out of here. [Susan looks annoyed that Lucy repeats everything she says]

Compare that to a classic nugget from The Naked Gun:

Drebin[standing at the foot of a ladder, looking off camera, ostensibly up Jane's skirt]: Nice Beaver

Jane[coming down from the ladder with a beaver]: I just had it stuffed.

As for the actors who play the four children (Kal Penn, Jayma Mays, Faun A. Chambers and Adam Campbell), well, they're still young enough in their careers that acquitting them would be the charitable thing to do. Ok, I'm kidding. After Kal Penn's wonderful turn as Kumar in Harold and Kumar go to White Castle, Penn reduces himself to an insipid prop. Same for Mays, who made a great supporting turn in Red Eye and played an endearingly sweet waitress in NBC's Heroes. Here, she's just Bree Hodge's retarded daughter.

I can't bring myself to further waste my time writing about this and further wasting yours by reading it. I believe you get the picture. Without the gut busting zip of a Zucker/Abrahams work or the insolent and raunchy humor of a Wayans' Brothers concoction, Epic Movie just left me wanting something I'd lost - namely 86 minutes of my life and ten dollars.

DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION:
The Contributor has no connection to nor was paid by the brand or product described in this content.

Published by Jack Aiello

Jack hails originally from Italy and now resides in the Bronx. His articles cover a broad range of topics, but mostly Arts and Entertainment. In his spare time, he loves photography and travel, reading...  View profile

4 Comments

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  • Craig7/7/2010

    The fact that such a talented writer dedicated 2 pages to reviewing this excuse for a film is more than they deserved.

  • CHAN LEE PENG1/28/2010

    This movie had a bad taste and I didn't several scenes of it. Great review!

  • Valerie Ferrari1/24/2010

    Wow, Jack, it seems pretty peculiar to begin with that they would go to the trouble of lampooning a bunch of movies from 30 something years ago!

  • John Myers1/24/2010

    Thanks for the great review Jack! There's one I won't have to see...

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