| "A
silly uninspired juvenile one-joke film."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
A silly uninspired juvenile one-joke film, that manages a
few amusing
moments before it runs out of material and pads its slight story with
repetitive jokes about a stiff no one at a party realizes is dead.
Director Ted Kotcheff ("Billy Two
Hats"/"Fun With Dick and
Jane"/"North Dallas Forty") aims
low for Animal House humor and manages to do that by channeling his
tale to yuppies. Writer Robert Klane goes to sleep on it after the
black farce premise is executed and from thereon the comedy dries up
faster than one can say The
Trouble with Harry.
Two young bumbling low-level Big
Apple insurance accountants, the smoothie wise-guy idler Larry Wilson (Andrew
McCarthy) and the still living with his parents nerdy tongue-tied whiz
kid Richard Parker (Jonathan Silverman), discover someone is cooking
the books big time and they alert their slimy playboy boss Bernie Lomax
(Terry Kiser). In gratitude he invites them to be house guests at his
posh Hamptons beach house for the Labor Day weekend. In reality he
doesn't have any good wishes for the boys as he contacts his mafia
partner Vito (Louis Giambalvo) to rub them out, but the don decides to
have his hit man Paulie (Don Calfa)
rub out Bernie with a lethal injection of cocaine instead because he's
screwing his girl Tina (Catherine Parks).
At the beach house the boys
discover that their boss is dead, and fearing they'll be suspects and
have to spend the entire weekend being grilled decide to keep it from
the authorities. They have no problem keeping it from party animal
Bernie's sexy bikini-clad bimbos and drunken male friends, who don't
even notice he's dead as they party at Bernie's all weekend while the
dead man's slumped over on the sofa. The boys do seemingly a zillion
abusive things to the corpse to pretend Bernie's still alive, which
results in mostly unfunny crude sight gags. The nicer of the boys,
Richard, takes time out to romance the sweet college student intern at
the insurance firm, Gwen (Catherine
Mary Stewart), whose folks have a beach house in the Hamptons.
Its funniest moments are when it's
at its most tasteless, as it tries to squeeze out of the limber corpse
as many laughs as it possibly can (the corpse manages to upstage the
living characters by getting more laughs). Though I found it hard to
really dislike, it's also hard to really like. The funniest gag has
hottie mafia gal Tina screw the dead Bernie without noticing he's a
goner and afterwards she tells the boys he has "never been better."
REVIEWED ON 7/19/2010
GRADE: C+
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ
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