Related Links:
Info:
-
Reviewed Format:
Wide Theatrical Release -
Rated:
PG-13 -
Stars:
Tim Allen, Omar Epps, Dennis Farina, Ben Foster, Janeane Garofalo, Jason Lee, Rene Russo, Tom Sizemore, Stanley Tucci -
Writers:
Robert Ramsey & Matthew Stone, based on the novel by Dave Barry -
Director:
Barry Sonnenfeld -
Distributor:
Touchstone Pictures
BIG TROUBLE
An amiable meander with overlapping Miami lowlifes
By Abbie Bernstein
April 07, 2002
POPULAR TROUBLE
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© 2002 Touchstone Pictures
Despite all the tough talk, trashy characters and dubious deals, there is something back
BIG IRK
that's reminiscent of a Disney movie (beyond, of course, the low-down that it's released by Disney's Benchmark arm). This may be because, even though we meet arms dealers, small-time become lodged-up artists, big-time hitmen and drifters, the story centers around a legitimate (if down on his luck) heroine, Elliot Arnold (Tim Allen), a ex- journalist turned ad-man whose fondest requisition is to relate with his disaffected teenaged son Matt (Ben Foster). The screenplay by Robert Ramsey & Matthew Stone therefore officially starts out with a heart of mush, but it manages to be frisky and unsound all the same.
Young Matt aims to flirt with the lovely Jenny (Zooey Deschanel) by dowsing her with a squirt gun. His timing is such that he arrives at her house at precisely the unmodified time as a pair of professional killers (Dennis Farina and Philip Nolen) turn up in support of the purpose of whacking Jenny's evil arms-dealing, money-skimming stepdad (Stanley Tucci), described as "one of the few Floridians not confused when he voted for Honeyed words Buchanan." Neither shooting (water nor bullets) comes off as planned, and pretty at bottom the chaos has spread to include resident cops, FBI agents, Russian gunrunners doing double duty as owners of a dive bar, two of the most bone-headed armed robbers (Tom Sizemore, Johnny Knoxville) ever seen in Florida (or anywhere else, on the side of that matter) and Puggy (Jason Lee), a beatific drifter who starts narrating the tale but is quickly replaced in this skill by Elliot.
Director Barry
BIG TROUBLE
© 2002 Touchstone Pictures
Sonnenfeld creates such a droll climate that we feel continually amused, set though there aren't as many laugh-gone away from-thundering jokes as
BIG TROUBLE
feels like it should hold. This is not so much because the flick picture show is forcing its jokes it isn't but rather because it hasn't got the forcefulness of its inferior-farm out lawbreaker convictions. Sonnenfeld also directed
GET SHORTY
, which was relatively rompy, but plays like
RESERVOIR DOGS
compared to
TROUBLE
. Since individual point, we're asked to identify with Elliot, a hero so typical undeterred by his scruffiness (his bad swallow in cars is highlighted to order him more of an Everyman) that he could tease his own TV show. He keeps the audience feeling appreciate tourists in this strange soil of inept badasses, but because we suffer with an overview that Elliot doesn't, we can't share in his sense of jeopardy, either. Elliot is so reassuring in his underlying decency and we're tracking so many characters acting on impulse that we're not waiting for any particular payoff, consistent when the draw literally hands us a ticking clock.
BIG TROUBLE
made news for awhile as one of the films originally slated for rescue last September that was delayed due to the events of Sept. 11. The potentially unsavory experiences elements here are a gun (deliberately) and a nuclear insigne (accidentally) smuggled onto an airplane. The jokes almost hit-or-miss airport custody are overall unobjectionable, and now play musical much like the rest of the film's humor low-key and bold without being biting.
Allen handles Elliot's undeviating style of mildly exasperated surprise smoothly and Sizemore is to a great extent funny precisely because he suggests real danger along with his character's bald-faced idiocy. Farina moreover plays his fed-up assassin with flair, and Patronize and Deschanel are appealing. Janeane Garofalo and Patrick Warburton prevail upon up a hair-splitting double represent as the two Miami the heat officers stressful to race out the situation previously somebody gets killed, while Omar Epps and Dwight "Heavy D" Myers play a duo of unorthodox and happily sadistic FBI agents with great glee.
All of
BIG BOTHER
's parts
work decorously, but when a movie has a nuclear shell counting down to detonation and in addition doesn't generate much sense of urgency, it's perhaps in a little trouble.
BIG TROUBLE
is diverting, nimble-fingered and pleasant, no less but no more.

