‘Dukes’ is an exercise in stupidity
Worthy candidates for Best Picture have been hard to come by in 2005,
but the front-runner for Worst Picture is already in a theater near
you. The attempted comedy in “The Dukes of Hazzard” is so bad it
makes the films of the Three Stooges seem like masterpieces. The
story is so stupid, you might lose 10 points off your IQ just by
watching the first hour.
The acting will make you cringe. Burt Reynolds plays a cartoon
version of himself as the evil Boss Hogg of Hazzard County. The Duke
boys, played by Johnny Knoxville and Sean William Scott, are as
brainless as Beavis and Butthead. They run moonshine in their hotrod
Dodge Charger, which is the real star of this film and smarter than
both Dukes put together. Moonshiner Willie Nelson is the only actor
with a twinkle in his eye and life in his role.
Jessica Simpson is definitely hot stuff in her short-shorts and
bikini tops. But the teenage boys who are the target audience will be
sorely disappointed in her few minutes of screen time.
The mindless action consists of car chases on country roads with
Keystone Kops in ridiculous pursuit. There is endless vehicle
destruction as the Dukes give their “yee-haw” rebel yells over and
over again.
Pointless and silly beyond belief, this movie is an embarrassment
to everyone involved.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
Keep the faith ... and your $9.50
Indie favorite Campbell Scott (“Roger Dodger,” “The Spanish
Prisoner”) is always worth watching, even in mediocre films. Sadly,
mediocre is exactly what the Canadian movie “Saint Ralph” is.
In this well-meaning but disappointing mix of “Porky’s” and “Billy
Elliott,” Scott plays the mildly rebellious Father Hibbert, a former
top marathoner who introduces Nietzsche and cross-country running to
small-town Catholic schoolboys in 1953.
The Ralph of the title is Ralph Walker (Adam Butcher), a lonely,
naive ninth-grader who is the butt of jokes by his classmates and
struggles to keep his thoughts pure in the midst of puberty.
Ralph is always in trouble with the stern headmaster, Father
Fitzpatrick (Gordon Pinsent), who’d like nothing better than to kick
him out. After one instance of misbehavior, Ralph’s punishment is to
run with the cross-country team as a way of burning up his excess
energy.
When his seriously ill mother lapses into a coma, doctors say it
will take a miracle for her to recover. Ralph then hears Father
Hibbert say that if one of his runners wins the Boston Marathon, it
would be a miracle. Guess what happens.
“Saint Ralph,” carries messages of faith and perseverance. But the
pace and dialogue are slow enough to induce a coma in even the most
ardent of movie fans.
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
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