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| Original Title |
Guy Thing, A |
| Director |
Chris Koch |
| Genre |
Comedy, Romance |
| Released |
2003-01-17 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated PG-13 for language, crude humor, some sexual content and drug references. |
| Rated |
5.3 |
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| When he wakes up the morning after his bachelor party in bed with a strange woman (Stiles), a man (Lee) presumes he must have cheated on his fiancee. Guilt leads him to try to cover it up in the week before the wedding, high jinks ensue. |
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| Jason Lee as Paul Coleman , Julia Stiles as Becky , Selma Blair as Karen , James Brolin as Ken , Shawn Hatosy as Jim , Lochlyn Munro as Ray , Diana Scarwid as Sandra , David Koechner as Buck Morse , Julie Hagerty as Dorothy , Thomas Lennon as Pete , Jackie Burroughs as Aunt Budge , Jay Brazeau as Howard , Matthew Walker as Minister Green , Fred Ewanuick as Jeff , Lisa Calder as Tonya |
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Silly and weakly plotted but reasonably funny and made more enjoyable by Lee's performance
Paul Coleman is a week away from marrying Karen when he wakes up next to a
dancer he met at his stag do. He quickly ushers her out of the flat and
hopes never to see her again. Sadly it is a matter of hours before he is
introduced to her again as Karen's cousin Becky. Paul tries to make it to
his wedding day without Karen finding out – an aim that is made more
difficult by Becky's crazy ex-boyfriend, overzealous police and the complex
web of lies Paul spins to cover himself.
On paper this film sounds awful and indeed almost every second of it is
teetering on the edge of being an awful romantic comedy that goes just where
you expect it to. The plot is simply daft – one contrived set piece after
another that is increasingly stretched as the film goes on. It ends in just
the way you know it will (despite how much I hoped it wouldn't or failed to
see how it could) and it will infuriate many in regards just how silly it
is.
However it is funny enough to cover the cracks. Much of the humour is
instantly recognisable and made up of well known routines (Paul climbing out
of the bathroom window) or physical comedy (some pratfalls along the way).
Happily there is plenty of slightly off the wall humour that, although not
new, is quite good. An example would be the `fantasy sequences' but my
favourite bit is Paul sweet memories of a male dance teacher. The whole
thing is very silly and you should prepare yourself for that, but it does
just about have enough silly laughs to keep it going.
For me the number one reason I enjoyed this film was the performance of
Jason Lee. At no point does he suggest that this is a serious film, in fact
many times a silly scene was saved by the `what the f is going on' look on
his face – a hint to us that he is in the film and he can't believe what's
happening, so the audience should go with him. For the rest of the time he
lends himself really easily to the type of humour and is able to raise the
material a bit. He is a good lead here and keeps bits of his `Brody' from
Mallrats to good effect. Stiles is awful in my opinion. She doesn't really
act and seems to be trying too hard to do `kooky' – it doesn't work. She
has so little screentime that I found it very hard to accept that Paul would
get anything from her. Blair has a thankless role and she doesn't quite
carry it off – like Stiles I felt that she was trying too hard and almost
came across as a caricature. Maybe they were both led by Lee's knowing
performance and responded in a bad way. Larry Miller is quite funny (but
predictable) as the minister next door and Brolin is a surprising find as
the father in law.
Overall this is a very silly film, based on one daft scene after another
that leads to a predictable ending that simply doesn't make sense even using
the logic of this type of film. However it is funny and a great performance
by Jason Lee makes it more enjoyable than it probably should
be.
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