BOTTOM
LINE:
Despite a slow start,
“The Hangover” is surprisingly funny, delivered with
clever wit and a strong chemistry between the lead characters. Director
Todd Phillips manages to elevate an otherwise unbelievable ‘stupid-comedy’
story to something more hilariously believable and down to earth.
THE
GOOD: The premise
is an oldie but a goodie; four guys go to Vegas to have a huge bachelor
party but end up having a bigger night than expected, losing the
groom and slowly discovering how bad a night they had as they search
for their friend with a huge hangover. One good ingredient to have
in a comedy like this is good character interaction between its
leads and “The Hangover” manages to deliver this in
spades. Phil, Stu and Alan, as played by Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms
and Zach Galifianakis, are the most unlikely trio you are likely
to come across yet their chemistry together is quite strong. Coupled
with a script full of clever one-liners and character sparring and
you have some very down-to-Earth and real comedy as opposed to the
highly contrived and manufactured comedy that could have so easily
come out of a film like this, particularly with the situations these
characters face: from trashing their Las Vegas villa in Caesar’s
Palace, to stealing Mike Tyson’s pet tiger, to literally pulling
out teeth, quickie-weddings to strippers, accidentally stealing
eighty thousand dollars from a Chinese gangster and swindling a
casino by counting cards at Black Jack (with an hilarious ‘Rain
Man’ homage) to name just a few of the antics these guys get
up to. What makes this film work above others in this genre is that
the characters have a strong goal to achieve; the groom is missing
and given their wild night, he could be anywhere and they have less
than two days to get him back to his wedding. The film’s laughs,
although stupid on the surface, have a deeper and clever resonance
which is unexpected and welcome. All these ingredients make for
one funny and entertaining ride of a movie once it gets going.