If you read only one blog full of ranting and raving about sports (local and otherwise), movies, TV shows, miscellaneous pop culture, life and other assorted flotsam and jetsam, make it this one!

Monday, April 5, 2010

Quick Reviews: Hot Tub Time Machine/She's Out Of My League

Time to discuss a pair of R-rated comedies. "Hot Tub Time Machine" came with all the hype, thanks to the trailers and the outlandish title itself. Its premise: middle-aged friends Adam, Lou and Nick (John Cusack, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson), having issues with the way their lives have gone, head for a weekend at a ski resort where they partied in their younger years. Tagging along is Adam's nephew Jacob (Clark Duke), a video game geek. The ski resort has, like the friends, fallen on some hard times. The hot tub works, though, and through the magic of Hollywood and a spilled beverage, somehow whisks them all back to a particular weekend in 1986. To everyone else, the three older men look like their 1986 selves while Jacob still looks his normal age. That tells you about the logic. You're just supposed to roll with the raunchiness while the guys re-live that weekend and try to change things to improve their lives in the present day. The 80s nostalgia works to an extent, with the music and clothing of the era, but throughout there was a string of gay jokes that, frankly, turned me off. I think I'm pretty liberal when it comes to using such jokes in comedies, but this film had a bit of a mean streak. My grade: B-minus.

Meanwhile, "She's Out of My League," which promised to be equally raunchy, also had a surprising amount of sweetness to it. Kirk (Jay Baruchel), a skinny, nerdy, not particularly attractive TSA employee at the Pittsburgh airport, is still trying to reconcile with his ex-girlfriend, who wants no part of him. One day a complete bombshell, Molly (Alice Eve) -- who also is out of a bad relationship -- leaves her iPhone in the security area, not realizing it until she's on the plane. Kirk returns the phone and hits it off with Molly, so they begin dating. His friends can't believe she's really into him, her friend insists she's only seeing him because he's safe. Not completely formulaic, and as I said, surprisingly sweet. Funny, without the gay jokes. My grade: B-plus.

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