KnightBrolaire
friendly neighborhood shitposter
Dead Ringers
How is one unfunny comedy related to trends in "modern comedy"? There are so many different kinds of modern comedy that one random movie can't be used to extrapolate trends. Like, it sounds from your description like this is more something you'd compare to crappy "dramedies" from the early 2000s vs most things that have come out in the last several years. Not that I've seen it. Looks like it's more than 10 years old though. But what are you talking about, anyway? What was the "golden age" of comedy? They've always mostly sucked! It's just that as the years go by people only remember the few good ones. So instead of thinking of the 70s as being the era of garbage romantic comedies starring Burt Reynolds or the 80s as being hundreds of Porky's ripoffs or the 90s as being a ton of unfunny garbage SNL cash-ins that bombed (ex Almost Heroes, Black Sheep, A Night at the Roxbury, It's Pat, Coneheads, etc), they think of the 70s as being the era of Animal House/Slap Shot/Blazing Saddles and the 80s as being the era of Ghostbusters/The Blues Brothers/Funny Farm or the 90s as being the era of Happy Gilmore, etc.Our Idiot Brother - rating: nope / 10
Paul Rudd playing a hapless fool. And it's not funny. Hollywood? Are you capable of funny movies anymore? You manage to take all the funny out of Paul Rudd. PAUL F'IN RUDD? WTF?
I'm tired of modern "comedy." It all feels like the writers think they're imparting some life-lesson shit, except it's so clumsy and stupid that it comes off completely disingenuous. They even had to have the self-worship of a movie/documentary producer shoved into this one. Just shut the fuck up and be funny for a change. Dang.
Couldn't agree more on Scott being so underrated. It's still inspiring to watch his work after all these years, and bonus points on his account of being willing and committed to teach stuff he can pull off in those action scenes.Scott Adkins is seriously underrated. Donnie Yen is also crazy to watch, but everyone knows that lol.
There used to a category of film referred to as "comedy" that would at least cause some laughing. Now there's a category of film referred to as "comedy" that seems to be a catch-all for whatever garbage that gets churned out that they can't figure out how else to promote.How is one unfunny comedy related to trends in "modern comedy"? There are so many different kinds of modern comedy that one random movie can't be used to extrapolate trends. Like, it sounds from your description like this is more something you'd compare to crappy "dramedies" from the early 2000s vs most things that have come out in the last several years. Not that I've seen it. Looks like it's more than 10 years old though. But what are you talking about, anyway? What was the "golden age" of comedy? They've always mostly sucked! It's just that as the years go by people only remember the few good ones. So instead of thinking of the 70s as being the era of garbage romantic comedies starring Burt Reynolds or the 80s as being hundreds of Porky's ripoffs or the 90s as being a ton of unfunny garbage SNL cash-ins that bombed (ex Almost Heroes, Black Sheep, A Night at the Roxbury, It's Pat, Coneheads, etc), they think of the 70s as being the era of Animal House/Slap Shot/Blazing Saddles and the 80s as being the era of Ghostbusters/The Blues Brothers/Funny Farm or the 90s as being the era of Happy Gilmore, etc.
The first Ant Man was at least amusing. I haven't seen the others yet.They made Paul Rudd unfunny in Ant Man, too. It's been done on a larger scale! At least we'll always have Wet Hot American Summer. I can watch that scene where he throws the plate on the floor and has to pick it up on repeat and laugh every single time.
Yeah, I dunno what you're referring to. Can you be more specific? List some other names? My suspicion is there are analogs for that in every decade since film began. I don't know anything about this Paul Rudd movie you're talking about.There used to a category of film referred to as "comedy" that would at least cause some laughing. Now there's a category of film referred to as "comedy" that seems to be a catch-all for whatever garbage that gets churned out that they can't figure out how else to promote.
I don't remember picking up any comedy before, say, twenty-ten or so that wasn't at least mildly amusing. Now we're sitting about about 20% chance of LOL, 60% chance of -_-, 20% chance it's some agenda being shoved down your throat with zero funny at all, but a star or two known for being comedic in the past.
I guess on some level I'd just like to see movies that aren't funny stop being promoted as comedies in general. There's a LOT of them out there right now. We've watched way too many of them when seeking out something funny, and I think I'm having a guttural reaction to being misdirected over and over again by our streaming services. Basically, if they don't know what category to shove a movie, they seem to just look at the lead stars and go, "Oh, comedy." Eisenberg *can* be funny, but he's got a SHITPILE of films out there that aren't funny, but promoted as comedy. This happened to be the first time I came across Rudd in a shitbox promoted as comedy, and it sorta irked me.
I'm more talking about movies that have no jokes at all being listed as comedies.Yeah, I dunno what you're referring to. Can you be more specific? List some other names? My suspicion is there are analogs for that in every decade since film began. I don't know anything about this Paul Rudd movie you're talking about.
If you mean "the jokes aren't ever funny" that's a matter of taste, basically every bad comedy ever made is like that. If you mean "there literally are no jokes" I'd have to know what movies you're talking about! I mean, there are plenty of comedies that are as much or more dramatic than they are comedic and are frequently referred to as "dramedies" (ex, Little Miss Sunshine, Funny People) but it's not like there's no humor in them at all! They're also their own subgenre.
I remember having a similar reaction to some blacker than black, drier than dry comedies from the good ol' days. They were absolutely comedies, they just weren't "lol funny joke" style. Ex Kind Hearts and Coronets, Rules of the Game.
While we have a few in common here, there's a trend going on whether you care to see it or not, of movies being labeled "comedy" that have no real attempt at humor in them. The only thing that was even mildly amusing in this Rudd fiasco was him telling the little kid to go tell his mom to go fuck herself. And that was only funny in the "yeah, I would have thought that was funny when I was the kid's age" way.Hm...yeah, still no idea what you're talking about when you say these movies contain no humor and are sold as comedies. I can think of many examples of movies marketed as comedies that didn't make me laugh once, but they still obviously contained what were attempts at humor. Ex, pretty much anything with "Movie" as the last word in the title, besides Not Another Teen Movie which is awesome. But like, my most painful comedy experience of all time was probably Sausage Party - I saw that in the theater and the entire thing was one big groan, didn't laugh a single time, utterly hated every second of it. But I could see where it thought it was being funny! LOL FOOD SAYS NAUGHTY WORD LOL!!!
I'm very picky when it comes to comedies, but I still don't know what you're trying to describe!
Looking at comedies I've really liked over the last 20 years, there's very few and most of them were dramedies. Ex The Big Sick, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Inside Out, Moonrise Kingdom, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Lady Bird, Adventureland, Hunt for the Wilderpeople, etc. I guess there were a few just silly ones I mostly liked, ex 21 Jump Street, What We Do in the Shadows, Deadpool, Cabin in the Woods, 40 Year Old Virgin, Superbad, Anchorman, Neighbors, Muppets Most Wanted, Hot Fuzz and Guardians of the Galaxy 1. For the most part though it's definitely TV which is vastly funnier. I Think You Should Leave, The Goes Wrong Show, early seasons of The Office/Parks and Rec/Community, etc. I think humor just works better in small chunks.
Just came home from watching the Super Mario Bros. Movie with the kids and my sister. What an awesome movie! A few moments were a tad scary for my 6yo, but they were very few and with 2 adults to comfort her it was OK.
The only "flaw" we found was that one beloved piece of music was missing, but that's just us - I used to play the game (Mario 3) and my sister would watch and sing along to the music with made up lyrics, and one of the songs we particularly remembered was missing.
Saw the Mario movie with the family over the weekend as well. Thought it was good fun, it doesn't need to be any more than what it is. The pacing moves too quickly and doesn't give any time for the characters to breathe in favour of showing all the set pieces and 'greatest hits'. But to be fair, it's become extremely rare for any movie in this day and age to clock in a tight 90 mins.
Regarding the music, I thought it was great when it uses all the classic songs and motifs, and even the 90s Super Show theme, celebrating Nintendo's legacy. But I thought it felt tired and contrived when the pop songs were used. Beastie Boys, that's fine I guess. Tomoyasu Hotei and Bonnie Tyler, they make sense on their respective scenes, but it's predictable and overdone. But using A-Ha on that particular scene was the song that most felt off. Apparently, there was another song that was intended to be used but was omitted in the last minute. And hearing it makes me wish they stuck with that song over Take On Me.
Yeah, it's a kids movie after all, so you can't expect it to be very deep and all that. I read some review of it where the plot was bashed, but tbh, who cares? Both adults and kids were laughing pretty much throughout the movie, so they must've done something right.
I agree about the music, they could've used music from the games for everything and just arranged the themes to fit the scenes. I mean, I get that AC/DC fits the part when they go karting, but why not just arrange some music from Mario Kart into that style instead? And like you said, they should've especially skipped Take on Me...