Reel Critics
- Share via
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Reel Critics column features movie critiques
written by community members serving on our panel.
Carrey’s antics save ‘Me, Myself and Irene’
In “Me, Myself and Irene,” Jim Carrey plays a Rhode Island state
trooper named Charlie who has a split personality. He is otherwise
mild-mannered and nonconfrontational until somebody or something pushes
him a little too far. That’s when his maniacal alter ego, Hank, takes
over.
Charlie is assigned to a routine mission to return alleged fugitive
Irene back to Upstate New York, but they wind up on the run from corrupt
police officers. And their escape would be a lot simpler for everyone if
Hank didn’t keep stepping in at the most inopportune times. Also, after
Charlie loses his medication, both personalities fall in love with Irene.
I consider Bobby and Peter Farrelly’s movies to be a guilty pleasure,
the kind of thing you don’t want to admit enjoying. The brothers do have
a way, though, of amusing small minds like mine, and “Me, Myself, and
Irene” was no different.
While the politically correct commandos will no doubt be out in force
(Yeah, I know, multiple personality disorder is not schizophrenia--give
it a rest already, willya?), you can find plenty to enjoy in this movie
if you just relax and put your brain on pause for a couple hours.
Carrey’s contortions are amazing and almost painful to watch--and for
once he doesn’t spend most of the movie just mugging for the camera. His
routine when the two personalities are battling it out is great.
Carrey’s co-star Renee Zellweger is charming and attractive, in an
unconventional way, and the rest of the cast is effective.
However, the actors playing Charlie’s “sons” stole the show with their
obscenely hilarious Chris Rock/Stephen Hawking vibe. And I also loved the
sports-star cameos by Detroit winger Brendan Shanahan, former Boston
Bruin Cam Neely and tennis player Anna Kournikova.
Unfortunately, none of the characters are well-developed, and the
“Dukes of Hazzard”-esque narration is annoying. Part of the problem is
that the usually reliable Carrey spends half the movie playing a
character who simply isn’t funny--not because of anything so whiny as
insensitivity to mental illness, but because it’s nothing more than an
over-the-top imitation of “Dirty Harry.”
While this might have worked for about 10 minutes, it gets old very
fast at feature length. The other problem, curiously, is that the
directors famous for going too far seem to take their usual tactic in
hitting taboo targets, but they do so rather tamely. If they’d pushed
some of this stuff as far as “There’s Something About Mary” did with
handicap jokes, for instance, they might have pulled it off. But really,
albino jokes? How many people out there are sensitive about albino
references?
Neverthless, racial stereotypes, sexual innuendos and a well-placed
chicken all keep the loose yet wacky plot on course. The movie was a
hoot, but no stretch for Carrey, whose physical antics support the dull
script.
The bottom line is this: If you’re conservative, you won’t like this
movie. If you aren’t really uptight you should like it--or find parts of
it funny.
* MICHELLE HANCOCK, 27, lives in Newport Beach with her husband and
works for a Costa Mesa law firm.
Best to wait for video of ‘Trixie’
“Trixie” is about an aspiring gumshoe who can’t get her boss to take
her seriously. In frustration, she leaves the agency and finds employment
in a nearby casino. Her assignment is to put the arm on pickpockets.
Emily Watson, as the title character, has the wide-eyed look of Meg
Ryan combined with the fumbling and bumbling of a Columbo, all the while
chewing serious amounts of gum.
The humor in this movie is based on the malaprops that Trixie employs
unknowingly in her everyday language. For instance, she might say “a
stitch in time is a horse of a different color” or say she’s “ravishing”
when she means “famished.”
Other cast members contributing in worthwhile ways are Leslie Ann
Warren as an entertainer who has been misused by men; Nick Nolte, who
does a credible raunchy politician; and Nathan Lane, a shining light as a
caring misfit.
Unfortunately, the plot is feeble and disjointed.
Filming was done in Vancouver, so the scenery is beautiful. The humor
is there but not much else of substance. You might want to wait for the
video.
* ELAINE ENGLAND, 65, lives in Newport Beach and owns a gift-basket
business she operates out of her home.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.