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Category:    Home > Reviews > Psychological Thriller > Drama > Comedy > Mr. Brooks/Bug/Knocked Up (Theatrical Film Reviews)

Mr. Brooks/Bug/Knocked Up (Theatrical Film Reviews)

 

Reviews by Chuck O'Leary

 

 

Mr. Brooks - If ever a movie epitomized the term "overplotted," it is Mr. Brooks.  The film starts out promisingly with Kevin Costner playing his first full-fledged villain, and William Hurt portraying his evil id.  However, the filmmakers clearly didn't have enough confidence in their interesting Jekyll and Hyde main character, and instead decided to keep adding plot on top of plot on top of plot.  The title character, Earl Brooks (Costner), is a wealthy, respected business owner who, for years, has successful kept his dark side hidden from the rest of the world.  Brooks is actually an elusive, notorious serial-killer (nicknamed The Thumbprint Killer) who wants to stop killing.  The good side of him uses the Alcoholics Anonymous program to quell his murderous compulsions, but his bad side (represented by Hurt, who Costner and the audience can see, but none of the other characters can) keeps goading him into committing more murders.  A psychological thriller devoted entirely to a serial killer battling the dichotomous forces within himself could have been fascinating, but co-writer/director Bruce A. Evans makes the monumental mistake of taking the focus off of Costner and Hurt, and introducing way too many needless subplots.  Before long, the film introduces a creepy witness (Dane Cook) to one of Brooks' murders who, in the first of a series of unlikely developments, blackmails Brooks into helping him commit his own murder.  Then there's Demi Moore as a super-rich girl turned police detective who's in the middle of a nasty divorce, chasing the Thumbprint Killer and being threatened by another killer she once put away who just escaped.  And as if those aren't enough plot threads to Juggle already, we're given another subplot about Brooks' college-age daughter (Danielle Panabaker), who might have inherited some of daddy's homicidal genes and be a killer herself.  Where the hell did that come from?  Despite good work by Costner and Hurt, Mr. Brooks ends up being a ludicrous mess.  Rating: 4 out of 10

 

Bug - No relation to the 1975 film of the same name with Bradford Dillman and electrified cockroaches, the 2007 Bug is a William Friedkin-directed psychological thriller based on Tracy Letts' 1996 stage play.  In her best performance in years, Ashley Judd stars as Agnes White, a substance-abusing cocktail waitress living at a remote motel somewhere in the desert Southwest.  When we first meet her, she's having a lesbian relationship with her best friend (Lynn Collins), and trying to fend off an abusive former boyfriend (Harry Connick Jr.) just back from prison.  Things start taking a strange turn after she lets a kindly drifter named Peter Evans (Michael Shannon reprising his stage role) stay the night.  Turns out Peter is a Persian Gulf War veteran AWOL from the Army who claims government doctors were using him as a human guinea pig.  Peter insists that the government purposely infected his blood with tiny insects and Agnes' motel room has become infested with these "bugs."  Soon the vulnerable Agnes becomes swept up in Peter's paranoid delusions and hallucinations.  Or are they really delusions and hallucinations?  Essentially a filmed play that unfolds within a single room, Friedkin's Bug is a claustrophobic, unsettling, intense and extremely well-acted parable about paranoia.  Going against everything considered commercial nowadays, it's a good head trip of a movie that also makes an increasingly relevant point that the more technologically advanced society becomes, the harder it is for the individual to have basic privacy rights.  The now 71-year-old Friedkin (The French Connection, The ExorcistRules of EngagementThe Hunted) is one of a just a handful of veteran filmmakers remaining who continues to do interesting work and make real movies.  Rating: 7 out of 10

 

Knocked Up - This is writer-director Judd Apatow's not-nearly-as-funny follow-up to his 2005 sleeper hit, The 40 Year-Old Virgin.  Here his main character is another arrested development type named Ben Stone (Seth Rogen), a twentysomething slacker who lives with a bunch of fellow slackers who dream of one day creating a website devoted to listing the nude scenes of famous actresses -- we're expected to believe they're all dense enough never to have heard of Mr. Skin.  One night he meets the pretty, upwardly mobile Alison (Katherine Heigl) at a bar, where Alison proceeds to get drunk enough to sleep with him later that night.  The central joke of the movie is that Alison finds herself pregnant with Ben's child, and the responsibility-challenged Ben has no idea how to deal with it.  Knocked Up has some sporadic laughs, but Ben and especially his roommates are just too gross to be the kind of charming free spirits Apatow thinks they are.  We're also expected to believe that Alison wouldn't be equally repulsed by these losers.  Crude as it often is, Knocked Up is another instantly forgettable romantic comedy about two not especially empathetic characters who should never end up together.  A few weeks after seeing it, this one is already fast evaporating from memory.  And with an overlong running time of 132 minutes (especially overlong for a comedy), it overstays its welcome by at least a half-hour.  Rating: 5 out of 10


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