If you didn’t get the Memo to hate Adam Sandler, his new movie That’s My Boy
would seem another likable, if minor, entry in his continuing series of
unexpectedly challenging human comedies. The anti-Sandler Memo is a
follow-the-leader pact–not literally a missive but an unconscious social
ideology that protects Hollywood’s status quo. It perverts honest,
healthy response to Sandler whose comic tendency is to affront the
status quo in film after film. His spoofing of political correctness and
middle-brow propriety is the real reason behind all the haterade which
became ridiculous after last year‘s ingenious, heartfelt Jack and Jill provoked an endless backlash of unprecedented lunacy and vitriol.
It’s payback because Sandler isn’t a bullyboy comic like Sasha Baron
Cohen. Sandler looks at class embarrassment, a concept our cultural
elite disdains but that his films trace to social and family relations
(i.e.. personal responsibility). In That’s My Boy Sandler
portrays blue collar slob Donny estranged from his yuppie son Todd (Andy
Samberg). This looks like a Jerry Lewis stunt although the situation
mostly recalls an ’80s father-son class comedy like the Tom Hanks-Jackie
Gleason Nothing in Common. But screenwriter David Caspe’s
burlesque approach throws it off kilter with a prologue that sets the
story‘s crazy-comedy tone: Teenage Donny became a legend when he had sex
with his high school math teacher (Eva Amurri) who was convicted for
statutory rape and gave birth to Donny’s son in prison.
More
5 comments:
Every character he does is the same. I thought it was funny when I was in grade school.
Every character he does is the same. I thought it was funny when I was in grade school.
June 24, 2012 2:07 PM
You must be very young
I liked Waterboy and Happy Gilmore a lot,but I have'nt cared much for anything Sandler has done lately.
442-His characters are exactly the same. Same mannerisms and buffoonery.
Glad I am not in the "elite" crowd. I happen to like some of his movies.
Post a Comment