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film


Mommy, I Googled Murder
Judd Apatow’s knockout follow-up to "The 40 Year Old Virgin"

Ray Pride

Where the fuckety-fuck to begin?

In a decidedly disingenuous cover story in the New York Times Sunday magazine this past week, Judd Apatow, whose career includes stints at the "The Larry Sanders Show" and "Freaks and Geeks," followed by the commercial and comedic success of his feature debut "The 40 Year Old Virgin" and of his co-producing stints, such as "Anchorman" and "Talladega Nights," is painted as a cry-prone, damaged man exploiting his own fears and life to make art that both entertains and alarms. While the unkindness of the reporter’s phrasing of certain delicate moments he observes over the course of a year and a half hanging out with Apatow is troubling, there are insights into what makes his movies work so well.

Seth Rogen is Ben Stone, a 23-year-old chubby, goofy-funny, um, stoner, who lucks one loosey-goosy night into a hookup with Alison Scott, an older woman who works for E! Entertainment Television. Condom hijinks lead to the titular condition. Around them are Ben’s bosom buddies, funny but deeply, darkly 23, with more puerile humor than you can shake a man-stick at. They’re convinced soon, someday, they’ll start up a Web site that tells you precisely where you can find the nude scenes in movies; there’s a funny double payoff when they discover something called mrskin.com that already does their dream job. Mostly, they get high, insult each other, talk about sex and get high. Accoutrements of the 23-year-old male American lifestyle today litter the sets: bongs, Perfect 10 magazine, Sierra Nevada, Corona, Pacifco, Red Stripe. The Canadian Rogen speaks in his Canadian cadences, as well as making hilarious references to his Vancouver origins.

Beyond becoming pregnant at the onset of her broadcasting career, Alison’s got the example of her older sister, Debbie (Apatow’s wife, Leslie Mann, about whom I will note for the record I am over the moon about) and Paul Rudd (who’s gone from being threateningly handsome to hilariously charming in recent years; he’s pretty and pretty wonderful, too), whose marriage with two kids is often at loggerheads. Apatow’s own plays the two daughters, and their battles are as cringe-inducing as any of the other deeply realistic stuff that’s in between the inspired gags. (And one of them has the fiercely real yet inspired taunt, "Mommy, I Googled murder.") That’s the gift of Apatow’s work: he understands the place of mortification; when we’re embarrassed for something we’ve done ourselves, we empathize more with a character who’s just been a dubious shit.

There are so many gags, most of which tend to the far reaches of scatology and obscenity, that even giving a few away won’t spoil the experience. Who on earth would come up with a female ob-gyn slipping during an exam and exclaiming, "That is not your vagina, that is your ass-hole." That would be the same man who has Ben explain his frizzy hair in his gravelly voice, "I use Jew, that’s what it’s called." And in the same scene, Jewishness is further underlined with the declaration, "If any one of use get laid tonight, it’s because of fucking Eric Bana in ‘Munich.’" Other jokes involve the relentless cajoling of a roommate who’s growing a huge beard on a bet: "‘Cos your face looks like a vagina"; "See you, Scorsese on coke." Plus folk wisdom galore: "It’s not herpes if it’s everywhere." And I don’t remember the context, but from my notes, I guarantee you, someone does wield the phrase, "buttfucking ham palace."

But back to Mann: for me, she steals this rude laugh and heart machine, as a fortysometing Tourettic sexpot with a slightly nasal voice, in every scene simmering like a woman still ascending her sexual peak. (Hot.) When she says "Am I hotter than these little bitches?" in a nightclub and hits five or six notes, my eyes went wide. Has a woman ever said "fuck" this much in an American movie outside of porn? The most classic line may be her delivery while tipsy and hiccupy of the word "cunt." Here’s the verbal construction: ruing the babysitter waiting for her back home, she says, "Pissy little high school cu—(hic!)" and you don’t think she’ll finish the word, but it comes out like this "Cu-hic!-uh. Cunt!"

Director of photography Eric Edwards has done some of the most gorgeous work of recent decades, including "Kids," "To Die For," "My Own Private Idaho" and "Cop Land," but this is one of the worst-looking movies in ages. ("Once" overcomes its grubby palette for different reasons.) Focal lengths are mismatched, close-ups collide against each other, and yet it’s precisely edited and the characters carry the day: visual beauty would get in the way of capturing and calculating the comic reactions of the dozen-plus characters. This is a movie John Hughes never grew up to make. Beneath the scabrous verbal filth, there’s a conservative message that could be embraced by even arch-kooks like James Dobson, the arch-reactionary anointed spokesman for faith by a credulous media. Family’s worth it, family’s hard, family’s necessary. Oh, and family is hard.

"Knocked Up" opens Friday.

(2007-05-29)




Also by Ray Pride

Summer Guide 2007: June Movies
June's Can't-Miss Films
(2007-05-22)

Summer Guide 2007: July Movies
July's Can't-Miss Movies
(2007-05-22)

Summer Guide 2007: August Movies
August's Can't-Miss Films
(2007-05-22)

At First Sight
Just because every movie reviewer in America is calling "Once" something like the greatest music movie of this generation and the best thing since two pints of Guinness on a sleepy Dublin Sunday is no reason not to listen to me as I grab you by the collar and tell you listen, listen to these songs, embrace this movie, because this muss of twigs and straw and strings and pixels and chords can break your heart like a four-minute-fifty-second pop song you will never get out of your head
(2007-05-22)

Tip of the Week
(2007-05-22)

One Dish
(2007-05-18)

Film Review
(2007-05-18)

How goes the Jihad?
(2007-05-15)

Tip of the Week
(2007-05-15)

One Dish
(2007-05-14)

Tip of the Week
(2007-05-08)

The Tyranny of Distance
(2007-05-08)






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