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The Burning

It speaks to the strength of The Burning’s reputation among cult-film fans that what’s most memorable about the 1981 slasher is not that it was written by the Weinstein brothers, nor that it represents early appearances of the likes of Jason Alexander, Holly Hunter and Fisher Stevens. It’s that its Cropsy is just a damned good villain.
05/24/2013 | Comments 0

Dexter: The Seventh Season

There's no way to discuss the seventh and penultimate season of Showtime's hit Dexter without acknowledging how the previous year ended. Therefore, if you haven't finished the sixth season, stop reading now. You've got work to do.
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Nightfall

As Simon Lam gets older, he gets better. The veteran actor has appeared in such in seminal HK action films of the 1990s as Once Upon a Time in China (opposite Jet Li) and Bullet in the Head (directed by John Woo); in the aughts, he graced audience and critical favorites Election and Ip Man.
05/20/2013 | Comments 0

Grand Duel

Lee Van Cleef enjoyed a secondary career in Italy cranking out spaghetti Westerns, with little regard to quality. However, 1972’s Grand Duel — aka The Big Showdown — is deserving of its Grand label. No wonder Quentin Tarantino borrowed its sweeping theme song by Luis Bacalov for Kill Bill; you'll recognize it in two notes.
05/20/2013 | Comments 0

The Last Stand

Early in The Last Stand, the small-town sheriff played by Arnold Schwarzenegger says, "It's my day off. Should be a quiet weekend." That's the new way of saying, "I've got one week to retirement," because it signals — with flashing neon and everything — that life is going to royally upend those plans.
05/17/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · Movies · Comedy · Grown Ups
Comedy

Grown Ups


Mike Robertson July 1st, 2010

Nostalgia is a reductive, lazy and ultimately boring activity that reductive, lazy and ultimately boring people use to shirk responsibility for the supposedly sucky present.

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It's reductive because nostalgia strips away past unpleasantness, keeping only the things that made you happy. A lot of people amplify those good things, remembering the past as a series of warm, floating, blissful encounters that were only possible when all was right with the world.

It's lazy because nothing could be easier, and it's ultimately boring because once people create their pasts' imaginary Candy Land, they tend to filter everything through that lens. Living in the present becomes a matter of being constantly disappointed and bitching about how things should be, rather than dealing with the way they actually are.

The reasons could be political (dirty liberals/conservatives have destroyed the institution of x), personal (when director Dennis Dugan was younger, everything was so wonderful), or just blamed on the inevitable march of time (I don't understand you damned kids and your crazy music!).

"Grown Ups" is basically a 100-minute exercise in stripping away the characters' complicated lives and replacing them with the happy-go-lucky days of 1978.

Back then, Lenny (Adam Sandler, "Funny People"), Eric (Kevin James, "Paul Blart: Mall Cop"), Kurt (Chris Rock, "Death at a Funeral"), Marcus (David Spade, TV's "Rules of Engagement") and Rob (Rob Schneider, "Bedtime Stories") were a winning basketball team, led by Coach Buzzer (Blake Clark, "Toy Story 3"), who encouraged them to be champions in life, just as they were on the court. The day they won the championship seems to have been one of the high points of each guy's life.

Thirty years later, Coach Buzzer has gone to the big gymnasium in the sky, and each team member brings his family back to New England for the funeral. Lenny, who has become a big-shot Hollywood agent, rents the lake house in which they celebrated their victory back in '78 so everyone can stay together over the weekend. Lenny brings his wife, Roxanne (Salma Hayek, "Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant"), and their three kids; his buddies bring their wives and rugrats, too.

They go to the funeral and then hang out at the lake. Being rich, Lenny's kids have never connected with their primal "regular kid" instincts, so they have to learn to play with rocks, swing from ropes, and do other dangerous kid stuff. In true "Green Acres" style, famous fashion designer Roxanne has to put up with not having four-star accommodations. Everyone else is a working-class slob, so they all act like the lake house is Buckingham Palace.

And that's pretty much it. With the stage set, Sandler and company cycle through a series of goofy situations: The guys play "arrow roulette," stare at young women, drink a little bit and generally get to know each other again. Together, they slowly replay all the things they experienced together as kids, and enjoy watching their own kids get into to the same shenanigans.

As far as silly situations go, "Grown Ups" provides some funny moments. Steve Buscemi ("Youth in Revolt") slums, as he often does in Sandler productions, turning in funny shtick as a member of Sandler's childhood basketball rivals.

Oddly, nothing really happens. The entire movie is just a group of people having a good time. A few pin pricks of angst exist among them, but whenever they bubble to the surface, they simply dissipate as soon as the scene is over and the crew has moved on to another fart/sex/physical injury/gross-out joke.

What's even weirder is that as the film progresses, the characters stop indulging in personal nostalgia for their shared past, and move into a weird societal nostalgia for the Good Ol' Days. They go on an honest-to-Christ hayride and wind up at a Fourth of July picnic where the whole town sits on blankets and watches old-timey guys in red-white-and-blue hats play patriotic music on a bunting-trimmed bandstand while fireworks light the star-filled sky.

In any case, financially, this movie will do well. There are a lot of people bummed out about the world right now, and "Grown Ups" will make some feel a little bit better for a while, because that's what nostalgia does.

It doesn't solve anything, but it's really great for pretending everything is fine until you leave the theater. —Mike Robertson
 
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