Tag: Jon Lovitz

  • ‘Mother’s Day’ is a wonderful holiday but a lousy movie

    ‘Mother’s Day’ is a wonderful holiday but a lousy movie

    Julia Roberts and Jennifer Aniston in 'Mother's Day'
    Julia Roberts and Jennifer Aniston in ‘Mother’s Day’

    “Let me tell ’em it was growing pains – the wrong execution of the right idea.”  Wayne Tippet as “Sergeant Major Kevin Moreland” in the 1981 film Taps.

    Sergeant Major Moreland’s comment above might be the best explanation of what happened to Mother’s Day.  Director Garry Marshall has had a long, distinguished career in Hollywood.  As a writer, TV series creator and as a film director.  His filmography includes gems like Beaches, Pretty Woman and The Princess Diaries.  Then beginning in 2010 he released the first of what is now three ensemble cast films that take place around big holidays.  First was Valentine’s Day which wasn’t great but it was watchable.  That was followed a year later by New Year’s Eve which was not as good as Valentine’s Day.  Six years later we get Mother’s Day which has a great cast whose talents are obscured by a bad movie.  The movie begins a few days before the titular holiday and takes place in Atlanta.

    Jennifer Aniston is “Sandy” who is a divorcee with two young sons and life is good.  Well, up until her ex-husband “Henry” (Timothy Olyphant) surprises her with the fact that he eloped with a much younger woman named “Tina” (Shay Mitchell).  That’s just the first of several surprises that Henry has for Sandy.

    Sandy is in search of more work as a designer and she has a chance to present a potential stage design to “Miranda” (Julia Roberts) who is a successful author and seller of jewelry on the Home Shopping Network.  Miranda is dedicated to her career and seems to have no personal life outside of work.  Her manager, “Lance” (Hector Elizondo) seems to be her only connection to the outside world.  But there is a link from her to “Kristin” (Britt Robertson).

    Britt Robertson and Jack Whitehall in 'Mother's Day'
    Britt Robertson and Jack Whitehall in ‘Mother’s Day’

    Kristin has a boyfriend “Zack” (Jack Whitehall) and the two of them have a daughter.  Zack would give anything to have Kristin agree to marry him but she seems dead set against it.  Zack is an aspiring comedian who is hoping to win a big comedy contest as a local club.

    Meanwhile “Jesse” (Kate Hudson) and her sister “Gabi” (Sarah Chalke) are living next door to each other and keeping their romantic lives secret from their parents “Flo” (Margo Martindale) and “Earl” (Robert Pine).  Jesse has been estranged from her mother for years and Gabi decides just before Mother’s Day is the right moment to try to heal that rift.

    There is another story arc involving a father and his two daughters where he is mourning the loss of his wife, a U.S. Marine lost in a combat zone but the above is more detail that necessary to articulate the fact that there is just too much going on here.  There are moments of laughter, only a few of which are slapstick.  But the intersecting story arcs seem far too contrived.  Julia Roberts gives the best performance, showing the emotional range that earned her a Best Actress Oscar years ago.  There is no question that this movie is a tribute to mothers everywhere.  Other than that, there is little to recommend in a movie that put a gigantic C in the word Cloying.

  • There is little grown-up about ‘Grown Ups 2’ but it will make you laugh

    There is little grown-up about ‘Grown Ups 2’ but it will make you laugh

    Chris Rock, Kevin James, Adam Sandler and David Spade about to jump off a cliff in 'Grown Ups 2'
    Chris Rock, Kevin James, Adam Sandler and David Spade about to jump off a cliff in ‘Grown Ups 2’

    Welcome to the latest meeting of the SNL alumni and the Adam Sandler acting company (some of the players are members of both groups).  This time the setting for their gathering is a sequel to one of Sandler’s earlier films.  That’s a first for Sandler, a sequel to one of his films.

    Grown Ups 2 takes the four close friends from the original (Rob Schneider does not return for the sequel) and moves them back home.  “Lenny” (Sandler), his wife “Roxie” (Hayek) and their kids now live in a big house, while his friends “Kurt” (Rock), “Eric” (James) and “Higgy” (Spade) all seem happy but each has his own unique problems.  Kurt is married to “Deanne” (Rudolph) and she is good friends with Roxie and “Sally” (Bello), Eric’s wife.

    Kevin James and Adam Sandler in a parking lot in 'Grown Ups 2'
    Kevin James and Adam Sandler in a parking lot in ‘Grown Ups 2’

    Lenny is not working as the film opens, while Kurt is a cable installer who has an amazingly light workload.  Eric owns an auto body/repair shop but seems to be spending all of his free time doing everything but working on cars.  Higgy is a womanizer who doesn’t believe in relationships, but he’s definitely down with sex.  Then stuff starts happening on the last day of school.

    Lenny’s oldest kid is being picked on by a bully at school.  That’s  déjà vu for Lenny as he had his own tormentor when he was young, “Dennis” (Steve Austin).  Somehow he’s going to have to teach his son to stand up for himself, something he never did himself.

    "Roxie" (Salma Hayek) in the boutique she owns in 'Grown Ups 2'
    “Roxie” (Salma Hayek) in the boutique she owns in ‘Grown Ups 2’

    Roxie owns a boutique and her one employee is head over heels in love with her husband, because of one “date” they had back in sixth grade.  Eric is keeping a secret from his wife.  Kurt just scored a major “get out of jail free” card over his wife because he remembered and she forgot their anniversary.  Higgy’s just learned he has a son and the kid is arriving that morning.  Then there’s the problems they have with a local college frat after an incident on “frat territory”.  There are life lessons ahead for all of them.

    This is more of the typical fare one can depend on to be present in any film that Adam Sandler is doing anything other than just acting in.  The same old actors in similar roles, the same type of urine and vomit humor, with sexual innuendo and undertones.  If you didn’t know that going in, shame on you.

    The thing is, I laughed.  A lot.  Some of it made me groan but there were many moments of hilarity.  It isn’t brilliant, cutting edge writing or directing but it is just over 100 minutes of fairly frequent funniness.