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Categorized: Movie Review

Movie Review: Observe and Report (2009)

COMMENTS

Jody Hill offers up an anti-comedy that misses its mark

Brad Brevet
By:
Published: Friday,

Seth Rogen as Ronnie Barnhardt in Observe and Report
Photo: Warner Bros.

Observe and Report is not as easy a film to review as I initially assumed it would be. It exists almost in an effort to defy itself. Sold as a comedy starring comic regular Seth Rogen it has a few laughs, but considering Rogen's character, Forest Ridge Mall security guard Ronnie Barnhardt, is a bipolar man child with delusions of grandeur, a fetish for firearms and is still living with his alcoholic mother we have a bit more than comedy to consider. Early on these personality traits are played for comedic effect, but as the film plays on we realize they define a very real and unstable individual just aching to crack at any moment. Next comes women bloggers screaming "date rape" all while the character being raped is last seen screaming for more. Add police brutality, slow motion naked fat men and the most powerful handgun in the world delivering a serious blow to the chest and we have just eclipsed comedy.

So what exactly is Observe and Report?

'Observe and Report'
Review
Grade: C+

Observe and Report"Observe and Report" is a Warner Bros. release, directed by Jody Hill and is rated R for pervasive language, graphic nudity, drug use, sexual content and violence.

The cast includes Seth Rogen, Anna Faris, Michael Peña, Ray Liotta, Aziz Ansari, Jesse Plemons and Lauren Miller.

For more information on this film including pictures, trailers and a detailed synopsis choose from the following menu.

More About This Movie
Most will call it a dark comedy, and while it is dark and has its funny moments that is to completely ignore the reality of it all. Writer/director Jody Hill (Foot Fist Way and "Eastbound and Down") has said comedies shouldn't be limited to jokes alone. Violence and/or drama in comedies doesn't need to be funny is his assertion. Citing Taxi Driver as his primary influence Hill has created his own Travis Bickle, but there is a disconnect in this film that doesn't allow the comparison to completely play out.

Over the course of the first half of this film Hill goes more for laughs, painting Ronnie as one of the most despicable characters you could meet. His self-designated purpose in life is to protect the weak and his attempts to do so are laughable, occasionally comic, but most times pathetic. He has zero social skills and is entirely unaware of just how dumb he is. To put it plainly, Ronnie is an ass of the worst kind, and as a result the character is unlikable in every way. The Bickle connection, however, is lost as Hill walks the fine line between comedy, reality and lunacy proving there isn't room for everything.

Along with Rogen the other "star" of the film is Anna Faris as Brandi, a make-up counter girl embodying all the short-comings you can throw at her. She's a dimwitted, drug using slut that has caught Ronnie's eye and won't give him the time of day until the night he manages to catch her coming home stumbling drunk, which is when he sees no problem in making his move. Their "date" dissolves into some of the funnier moments of the film, but at the same time has drawn questions regarding date rape from various corners. Considering Ronnie's disturbing behavior throughout the film I think it is an overreaction, but the fact Warner Bros. is selling this film as a laugh-out-loud comedy, and the scene in question has one of the most comedic moments in the film, the criticism has its merits.

I bring up this date rape issue not in an attempt to be morally correct, but to show the primary flaw this film has going for it. Despite the comedic aspects, one could argue Observe and Report is a serious film looking at the life of a disturbed individual and society's reaction and involvement in making him what he is and even, at times, reinforcing his behavior. I have no idea how far Hill actually intended audiences to take the serious nature of the film and how much he expected us to laugh, but based on what I have read he didn't intend for audiences to necessarily feel good about what they were laughing at. What Hill has attempted is inspired, and maybe in the hands of another director it would have worked, but with Observe and Report it just dissolves into utter chaos, which again may be intentional, but that would just be reaching too far.

For what it's worth I didn't really enjoy the film. I had a few moments of laughter, one of which involves Ronnie alone on a dark street corner surrounded by crack heads led by Danny McBride (Tropic Thunder and "Eastbound and Down") and the subsequent scene with Ronnie and Detective Harrison played by Ray Liotta, whose character actually disappointed me. I originally expected Harrison to be the counterpunch to Ronnie, but instead the two were one-in-the-same. If this is Hill's way of making a point that's great, but to know a police detective can be just as crazy as a bipolar mall cop doesn't do much for me and really adds nothing to the movie.

With Observe and Report we are talking about something I would define as an anti-comedy and it bucks the system at every turn. I can't say I have seen a movie like it, but that doesn't mean it gets extra points for being original (Okay, maybe a few). Yet, when all is said and done, it will be interesting to see how audiences take to the film overall and how many, like me, will have their share of laughs, but come out ultimately disappointed.

GRADE: C+
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Showing 10 Comments

  1. Bob Saget

    I've already read a few articles/blogs on the internet concerning that "date rape" scene. While I haven't seen the movie yet I don't understand why it's being talked about so much. IT'S A MOVIE FOR GODS SAKE. If the message you take from a film like this is "date rape is ok" or that the movie is actually condoning it then you're insane.

  2. Patricia

    @Bob Saget: It's not that this condones date rape, but it treats it as a comic element. And don't give me "it's only a movie" stuff. Even the most bizarre sci fi film relies upon our ability to fantasize and imagine ourselves within the story. Comedies in particular play upon our common experience. There's a message in that scene alright and it makes me uncomfortable.

  3. rolling_streetcar

    I agree with Bob Saget (doubt that's the real Bob, but if it is, I'm a huge fan). It's just a movie. That's all there is to it. If you take your morals from movies or TV, you're an idiot.

  4. Patricia

    Finding something offensive is not "taking your morals from movies or TV". It's called discernment. And I'm going to make a leap here and say that someone who calls those who disagree with them insane or idiots, is not much into discernment.

    I found your in depth review very interesting, Brad. I'm getting the idea from your "anti comedy" remark that this one is almost defying people to laugh. Sounds like it could easily have been edgy and cutting edge. But if it was done by accident rather than design, it just becomes uncomfortable and disappointing. I'm getting the impression this is the latter. I guess I'll have to judge for myself. But I'm not hurrying off to do that.

  5. Bob Saget

    @Patricia: Like I said I haven't seen the movie. So I can't speak personally about how the scene plays out. Regardless of this, if I assume you're right and the movie doesn't condone date rape but treats it as a "comic element" well how is that worse than the numerous movies that treat serious subject matter such as death, drug abuse, etc as comic material? I know its pointless to compare one movie to another or to compare one situation to another, but I hope you see my point. It's possible I will see the movie and be truly taken aback by the scene. Even if I do, I still know its fiction. Even if Jody Hill is trying to make a point or send a message this isn't Taxi Driver. It's still a dark comedy. If he wanted to make a real point then go make a drama. I just think if you want to nitpick over all the details of a movie like this and look for messages then why not focus on the mental health aspect? Bipolar disorder is no joke and seeing them make fun of it in a movie is offensive. Why are the "crazy" people in movies always violent? You know how rare it is for the mentally ill to be violent like they are in the movies? Hahaha see now I'm going on a rant now. I know I'm not really making a lot of sense or a cohesive argument so I'm sorry about that. I hear what you're saying but I guess we'll just agree to disagree. And rolling_streetcar … no I'm not Bob Saget. I wish that'd be awesome.

  6. Patricia

    @Bob Saget: I like your attitude, Bob. I certainly respect the notion of "agreeing to disagree" because I adhor the attitude that you have to be wrong for me to be right. Let's begin by saying we can BOTH be right in our own way. Yes, I do think it is horrible to make fun of mental illness. But it is important to always allow us to make fun of ourselves. No one can make better jokes about drinking than a bunch of AA members…don't ask me how I know that. And as for death…other's peoples deaths are indeed tragic, but the NOTION of death is the biggest joke in the universe, trust me. So would this date rape be indeed funny from the viewpoint of the woman? Not. (Listen to the song "Date Rape" by Sublime.)

  7. mostlyharmless

    LOL Some times someone is right and and someone is wrong. Deal with it. Seth has shown us on screen, what happens very night all round the world to lots of women, for good or bad, where's the shock? All this reaction has me intrigued now.

  8. Aj

    observe and report was so so but it fell hard inmthe end

  9. Bob Saget

    @Patricia: well said : )

  10. Chris C

    I found the film to be an insightful look into the cyclic nature of mental disease, and an intelligent commentary on society's role in lunacy. Although I didn't laugh as much as I hoped, the dramatic nature of the film served as more-than-adaquate compensation.

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