Genre:
Comedy Starring: John C Reilly, Mary Steenburgen, Will Ferrell, Adam Scott,
Richard Jenkins, Director: Adam McKay Producer: Jimmy Miller, Judd Apatow Distributor: Columbia Pictures Release Date: July 25, 2008 Writer: Adam McKay, Will Ferrell
Will Ferrell's latest comedy is yet another inspired attempt to mine his
particular brand of repressed juvenile humor, but this time he goes a little
further with a sly commentary on the elusive definition of "growing up." Brennan
Huff (Will Ferrell) lives with his single mother, Nancy (Mary Steenburgen --
only 15 years older than Ferrell). And Dale Doback (John C. Reilly) lives with
his single father, Dr. Robert (Richard Jenkins). Both men behave as if they were
young teenagers, lazy, spontaneous, and self-serving.
There's no hint as to why or how they got that way, but both Reilly and Ferrell
do an uncanny job tapping into their inner teenage boy. When Nancy and Robert
meet, fall in love and marry, the boys are forced to move in together.
They instantly hate each other, but quickly become best friends. The real anchor
and driving force of the film are Steenburgen and Jenkins, whose realistic
portrayals of realistic people offset the boys' behavior. Nancy and Robert share
a dream of exiting the rat race and retiring together on a boat, but the film
pays close attention as their marriage begins to shatter under the strain of
these two grown children. A second character, Brennan's younger brother,
provides more commentary.
Derek (Adam Scott) was an abrasive jock in high school, but now working a
successful corporate job selling helicopters, he behaves exactly the same; yet
his behavior is "acceptable," especially to the doctor. The film's main line of
comedy relies on Ferrell and Reilly -- who look and act virtually the same --
clowning around and playing with boyish insults and inexperienced use of swear
words, and it works, but the underlying themes are far more fascinating. Kathryn
Hahn also gets some laughs as Derek's suffering, repressed wife, and Seth Rogen
appears in one scene. (Judd Apatow produced.)