Filed under: Movie Reviews

Movie Review: Funny People (2009)

Loses steam in the second half, but still not bad

Adam Sandler and Seth Rogen in Funny People
Photo: Universal Pictures

Definitely do not go into Funny People expecting The 40-Year-Old Virgin or Knocked Up because you aren't going to find either of those films here and you are only going to cause yourself agitation. For many I believe that will be the key to whether you end up enjoying this film on some level or walking away in disgust. Early reviews have already drawn the line between those that consider Judd Apatow's most down-to-earth film to date a bore and others that found a heart beat to his story-telling. I can't say I am down-the-middle only because I was never once bored, despite the 146-minute running time, thanks Apatow's top-notch story-telling ability.

The main problem I had was that I came away from the film with very little, and to say something is accomplished is a stretch. I would be willing to admit the characters grew throughout the film, but to what extent I can't really say and their growth had very little affect on me while watching.

Funny People tells the story of comedian George Simmons played by Adam Sandler, a character that so closely mirrors Sandler it would be a shock if you told me he wasn't inspired by Apatow's one-time roommate. Simmons, like Sandler, has starred in his share of seeming box-office cash grabs such as Merman, which looks like an idiotic remake of Splash, and Redo which can only be compared to the Wayans brothers' Little Man. Like Sandler he has gained a fanbase, but unlike Sandler he isn't happily married. Beyond that, Simmons has some issues. He isn't a nice person, he is lonely, has no close friends and has just learned he has a rare blood disease of which he is expected to have an 8% chance of surviving. It is at this point he reaches out to young comedian Ira Wright (Seth Rogen) and takes him on as an assistant, confidant and ultimately the closest thing he will have to a friend.

Like I said, don't expect Knocked Up. While there is a joke around almost every corner half the time it is used as deflection. Sure, there are some great moments of stand-up, but even those moments can carry additional baggage since the viewer knows the backstory in this documentary-esque/behind-the-scenes dramedy.

But it isn't all serious and mopey, the comedy is definitely there; it's just more realistic and true-to-life comedy. It's the jokes you share between friends when someone does something stupid and you share a laugh, but even more, this film is about growing up and in George's case, getting over oneself.

Funny People has two sides to the story. The first has just been described and follows along as George and Ira work the comedy circuit together and form an assumed bond. The second follows a more traditional pattern, loses the documentary/behind-the-scenes look at life and digs itself in for the long haul as George revisits old friends and selfishly sets out to rekindle the fire with an old flame played by Apatow's wife, the lovely Leslie Mann.

The second half definitely bogs down the film as one setting seems to almost take up an hour of running time, accomplishing very little in terms of giving the audience any new information and loses a lot of the luster the first half earned. Eric Bana comes along as the film's "wacky character" and while Apatow avoids traditional stereotypes with Bana's character he almost seems to find his own form of cliche that never quite works. Bana is mildly entertaining but hardly believable and his scenes are so polar opposite from the rest of the film they never quite seem to fit.

As things begin to wind down you realize you don't have anyone to cheer for. What is learned is of little consequence and almost feels insignificant. A fellow critic told me this was what they liked about the film's ending as it mirrored real life and the way we get knocked down and pick ourselves up and learn from our mistakes. I wasn't able to reach that conclusion because I never really connected to the characters enough to actually find that lesson all that inspiring.

Apatow's ability to keep me curious as to where he was going to take things next was this film's saving grace in my case. Even though I didn't get a lot out of where the film ended up I must give credit to the director for keeping me interested. As a matter of fact, there was a moment where the film almost lost me entirely, but Apatow managed to regain my confidence ten minutes later as he avoided one of the worst cliched trappings you expect with a film of this sort. With this said, I feel repeat viewings of Funny People would have me siding more with the negative crowd than the positive as I can't see this one holding up over time, but as a one-time showing I came away with enough to say I was satisfied.

GRADE: B-
Funny People was released by Universal Pictures on July 31, 2009 and was directed by Judd Apatow. The MPAA has rated it R for language and crude sexual humor throughout, and some sexuality. The cast includes Adam Sandler, Seth Rogen, Leslie Mann, Eric Bana, Jason Schwartzman, Jonah Hill, RZA, Aubrey Plaza and Aziz Ansari.

For more information on this film including pictures, trailers and a detailed synopsis click here.

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Post #1
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Seen three reviews, all the same, good total movie, great first half that weak second half. After hearing that from people, why is this movie 136 minutes?

- Steve
( July 31st, 2009 | 8:45 am )
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Post #2
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this may be wayyyyy off but i see a couple plot similarities to ikiru here based on your description.

- chewbaca69
( July 31st, 2009 | 9:36 am )
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Post #3
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It´s always a good sign when an actor shows ambition, as seems to be the case with Adam Sandler in his new movie, and I wish him luck. However, until now the man has been an utter disgrace (with one exception), always playing the drooling fool. About time to grow up, what is it, in his early 40´s? The tricky thing is the market, which happens to be in the state of the common moron. The market wants the fool to stay the fool. You´re not allowed to grow or stretch if you fall in the trap of playing the same character from the beginning of your career. Sorry, I didn´t invent the moronic market. It´s just in plain sight. How can you otherwise explain the ungodly success of moronic movies?

- Helgi
( July 31st, 2009 | 10:27 am )
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"Even though I didn't get a lot out of where the film ended up I must give credit to the director for keeping me interested. As a matter of fact, there was a moment where the film almost lost me entirely, but Apatow managed to regain my confidence ten minutes later as he avoided one of the worst cliched trappings you expect with a film of this sort."

Pardon me, but it appears you're saying that this film wasn't all bad. That is praise? When did you develop such low standards? It was lame and pointless, but at least you weren't bored? "What is learned is of little consequence and almost feels insignificant." But it didn't indulge in an obvious cliche? Oh, Brad.

- Patricia
( August 1st, 2009 | 5:27 pm )
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Now that opening weekend is over it´s obvious even to the blind that Funny People is weak; a flop. How do you explain that? The morons don´t want a fool to play anything but the fool. Certainly nothing serious. It´s too not-foolish for the market. Even on Apatowic terms.

- Helgi
( August 2nd, 2009 | 11:37 am )
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@Helgi: "Now that opening weekend is over it´s obvious even to the blind that Funny People is weak; a flop."

I haven't seen this film. I'm not going to defend it. But I am heartedly sick of comments that reflect the dollar as the almighty judge of excellence. The marketplace is mercurial. Good films are overlooked. Excellent films are overlooked. Crap films make millions and millions. Fillms that break out of genre stereotypes are undervalued.

Like I said, I'm not saying this film is great, or misunderstood, or a breakthrough. I'm just saying that any serious critique of any film shouldn't start with boxoffice figures. When the audience becomes complicit with the bean counters in the studio's back office, we all suffer.

- Patricia
( August 2nd, 2009 | 11:45 am )
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I saw this last night, thoroughly expecting to love it….. but I hated it. It seems to me that Apatow wrote an adequate comedy script, and gave it to his alter-ego to direct as a drama. It seemed to me that Sandler and Rogen were attempting drama performances instead of their usual comedic performances, that Sandler (and Mann) succeeded, and that Rogen failed abysmally. Then…. it seemed that the supporting cast, namely Jonah Hill and Jason Schwartzman, was still churning out comedic performances. I like a little imbalance, a little unpredictability, but this movie simply could not settle down.

There are movies that are comedies that have touches of gravity and genuine pathos; there are movies that are serious with brilliant dashes of humor. This was neither. I found this to be an unenjoyable Frankenstein of a movie: the comedy and drama were simply patched together thoughtlessly, so that neither succeeded.

And finally…. ditto everything Patricia said, as usual.

- Dan Tralder
( August 3rd, 2009 | 9:45 am )
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Post #8
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First 2/3rds really good-last 1/3 a total misfire
Solid performances out of Sandler and Rogen.
6 out of 10.

chuck

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Post #9
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watch online at

http://megashare.info/watch.php?id=TWpNeQ

- MegaMovies
( August 8th, 2009 | 8:10 am )
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