Reviews, profiles and news about movies in Chicago

Review: Zack and Miri Make a Porno

Comedy, Recommended No Comments »

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Class and cash remain at the center of Kevin Smith’s latest, the epigone of scat-chat called “Zack and Miri Make a Porno.” The material sings because of his casting of his two leads, with Seth Rogen and Elizabeth Banks as the platonic Pittsburgh roommates who hatch a quick-cash scheme to make amateur porn to get out of debt and discover the feelings they’ve been hiding. (Their giddy rapport almost makes up for the glimpses Smith provides of Jason “Jay” Mewes’ junk.) Smith starts with the idea of the ickiness of thirtysomething poverty, of a sense of not being able to get ahead in the modern workplace. Rogen’s timing is complemented by Banks’, as well as her seraphically deranged laughter at embarrassing moments and brightly pointed passages of frank japery about sex. To put it one way, Smith starts at “snowball” and snowballs from there: the cascade of everyday-vulgar verbiage in “Zack and Miri” is unmatched. And there’s something sweet about the two characters who banter, “Anybody wants to see anybody fuck”; “Who the fuck would want to watch us fuck?” And leave it to Banks: “Fuck you. I have dignity.” Advisory: “Star Wars” porn, clumsy sex and scatology ensue, as well as a joke saying the word “DreamWorks” sounds like “an underground fuck club.” “Rated R on appeal for dialogue, graphic nudity and pervasive language.” Yum. With Justin Long, Tom Savini, Traci Lords, Gerry Bednob, Jen Schwalbach, Brandon Routh. 102m. (Ray Pride)

Review: Vince Vaughn’s Wild West Comedy Show

Comedy, Documentary, Reviews No Comments »

Comic actor Vince Vaughn loads up an RV with four stand-up comics from Los Angeles’ Comedy Store for a chuckle-headed road trip. None of the talent could sustain a full-length concert film of their own but there are sufficient laughs pulled from some 600 hours of video. The tour began in California and ended at The Vic Theatre in Chicago, with gigs in fourteen states in between for a “regional” outreach to the comedy-deprived. Read the rest of this entry »