Rating
-
Comedy (US);
2001; Rated PG-13; 86 Minutes
Cast
Ben Stiller: Derek Zoolander
Owen Wilson: Hansel
Christine Taylor: Matilda Jeffries
Will Ferrell: Jacobim Mugatu
Jerry Stiller: Maury Ballstein
Milla Jovovich: Katinka
Produced by Stuart Cornfeld, Celia D. Costas, Joel
Gallen, Monica Levinson, Scott Rudin, Adam Schroeder, Ben
Stiller, Lauren Zalaznick; Directed by Ben Stiller;
Screenwritten by Drake Sather, Ben Stiller and John
Hamburg
Review Uploaded
10/12/01 |
Written
by DAVID KEYES "Zoolander"
is preceded by a tag line that states "3% body fat,
1% brain activity," of course referring to the title
character, a model who (by intention) has a mental capacity
so low that you could practically step over it. Anyone who
has bothered to sit through the movie, however, will think
of it to be also an appropriate description for the film
itself, which is by far one of the most frustrating, painful,
lackluster and idiotic comedies made in the past year. Featuring
Ben Stiller in the lead and a script hell-bent on poking
fun at an already self-parodied business, one wonders what
the real direct intention of this half-assed job could have
been: to kill time in the actor's schedule, to cheat unsuspecting
victims of their hard-earned money, or simply to provide
several well-known actors the luxury of being able to say,
"Hey, I was in a movie with that person!" without
ever actually having to put in much effort into the task.
The
movie was directed by Stiller himself, who is usually the
butt of jokes in the movies he stars in, and yet somehow
always manages to come off as an authentic and observant
comedian, albeit often in an embarrassing sort of way. After
seeing what he puts us through here (not to mention "The
Cable Guy" and "Reality Bytes," which he
also directed), perhaps behind the camera is not the right
place for him; as the man in charge, he takes away the opportunity
for a real director to offer constructive criticisms on
how he can effectively handle this particular role. The
man he plays is Derek Zoolander, a flashy, flamboyant and
dimwitted male model who was once at the top of his game,
but has now begun to slip quietly off into the background
to make room for more fresh faces, one of them being the
Ken-doll-like Hansel (Owen Wilson). Zoolander's slowly-degenerating
public existence attracts the attention of sadistic Jacobim
Mugatu (Will Ferrell), a bizarre and creepy fashion designer
whose work is produced primarily through child labor. The
reason? Mugatu needs a brainless man with a great physique
to carry out his goal, which is to take out the Prime Minister
of Malaysia because, as the movie tells us, he is threatening
to close down the sweat shops from which the designer's
work is crafted.
In
just 86 minutes, "Zoolander" manages to incorporate
a lot of brainwashing, runway-walking, pained facial expressions
and quirky hair styles, but almost never a shred of wit.
Other than an inappropriate approach to an assassination
plot (which later spawns an unfunny and implausible gag
directed towards the Kennedy conspiracy), the movie also
confuses comedy with general stupidity, allowing the characters
to spout out lines of idiocy as if the effort is enough
to warrant laughs. Stiller is always the key victim in this
severe miscalculation of humor; he occupies the movie like
a failed comedian who won't accept being booed off of stage.
None of the main actors are ever given a solid possibility
to gleam something out of the stale material, and the movie
features countless celebrity cameos, ranging anywhere from
David Duchovny to Cuba Gooding, Jr. to Winona Rider and
even David Bowie. The cameos, alas, serve no purpose other
than to provide the picture with extra faces; some don't
even have their own lines of dialogue.
Could
things get any worse? Of course they can. When the efforts
of the movie's stars aren't being wasted by the severe script
stupidity, they're being torn apart in another manner: that
of the movie's need to dress the stars up in costumes so
silly that they would make Bob Mackie cringe. There is a
scene I am reminded of in which Zoolander and Hansel face-off
in a model posing contest, all in front of a cheering audience
and to the tune of Michael Jackson's "Beat It."
The result of this particular scene could have at least
been plausible, if not for the fact that the actors look
like they've wandered off of the set of "To Wong Foo"
and accidentally onto this one.
©
2001, David Keyes, Cinemaphile.org.
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