Yes Man
Dir: Peyton
Reed
2008
*
Like with every
other film I watch, I approached 2008's Yes Man with an open mind. I say
this because there were a couple of things about the film I disliked, even
before sitting down to watch it. I can't stand Jim Carrey, I'm really not in
Zooey Deschanel's fan club and Peyton Reed had
yet to make a good film (he wouldn't make a good film until 2015's Ant-Man,
although I'm still puzzled as to why he was asked in the first place). I also
can't stand Danny Wallace (whose book the film is based on),
or Danny Wallace's hair for that matter. However, Jim Carrey was good in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and
Man on the Moon, Zooey Deschanel can be sometimes quirky in a positive,
almost likable sort of way and the film stars the great Terrance Stamp and
features the brilliant Rhys Darby in his feature film debut. It's also
co-written by Nicholas Stoller, who while being hit and miss when it comes
to movies, has been more hit than miss in recent years. Like I said, I was
open-minded. I hated every second of this horrible, horrible film. Jim
Carrey doesn't act, he performs and I don't mean that in a good way. His
character is the same as it is in nearly every film he's in, he's a
rubber-faced goon who thinks he's Jerry Lewis or Don Knotts, but
while Jerry Lewis and Don Knotts had signature gestures, they moved
on in their careers and did lots of different things and played different
characters. Jim Carrey's goonish behaviour has only ever been justified in
The Mask - I didn't like that film either. I actually felt sorry for Zooey
Deschanel, she got to write and perform one of her quirky songs but for the
rest of the film she simply stood next to Carrey's character, never really
able to develop herself. Her character was fun and quirky because we were told
she was fun and quirky, without being given the evidence. I felt bad
for Terrance Stamp too, I hope he was paid handsomely for his
performance, it's amazing just how many roles he has turned down over the years
out of integrity, one can only assume he's broke or was misled. His character
was also named Terrance, which I thought was strange. Was the character
somehow based on the actor or where they unsure whether the audience would
recognize him? I'm not sure I want to know the answer, I hope it was just
coincidence. Thankfully Rhys Darby is funny no matter where or what he is
doing, funny is in his bones and the film is only just watchable thanks to him.
Bradley Cooper has a relatively large role in the film just before he became an
A-lister but much like Deschanel he is left hanging on the sideline and it
is never convincing that he and Carrey's character are the best of friends. I
don't care much for Danny Wallace but his original book, based on his own
actions, is nice and simple. This weird adaptation is brash and stupid. Wallace
had the idea after when a stranger told him to say yes to everything while he
was sitting on a bus. He then accepted credit card offers, solicitations
on the Internet and accepted and acted upon leaflets that were handed to
him - he even reluctantly joined a group that explored the link between alien
life and ancient Egypt but as far as I know he didn't accept phalacio from
an elderly neighbour. There were lots of funny and interesting things Wallace
said yes to that could have featured but somehow oral pleasure from a pensioner
was one of the first things that came into the writer's mind. If that is your
idea of funny then you have just wasted your time reading my review but for me
the film was like listening to someone scratch a chalkboard continuously for
104 minutes, although it felt longer. To make matter worse, Wallace (and his
horrible hair) has a cameo.
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