BOTTOM
LINE:
A very strange parody
of the film industry that would have worked if it was actually funny,
but unfortunately for the most part, it's not. There are a few highlights
though, namely a hilarious Robert Downey Jr. and an equally brilliant,
if unrecogniseable Tom Cruise.
THE GOOD:
Ben Stiller has decided to do inside baseball on the
film industry with "Tropic Thunder" and in certain aspects
of this film, he has captured the ridiculous nature of the industry
through some nice caricatures and dialogue. The film opens with
three fake previews, introducing the three main actors who headline
the film. The best is Robert Downey Jr's trailer where he plays
a monk who discovers his gay longings for another man played hilariously
by Tobey Maguire. From there, we're thrown in to the Vietnam jungles
where the stellar cast of Tugg Speedman (Ben Stiller), Jeff Portnoy
(Jack Black) and Kirk Lazarus (Robert Downey Jr) are trying to make
a war picture but aren't getting very far because they can't find
their motivation. Enter Les Grossman (an unrecogniseable Tom Cruise),
the financier of the film who threatens the director with all kinds
of anguish if he can't get the film back on track. Not knowing what
to do, the director has a chat with the man who wrote the book the
film is based on, Four Leaf Teyback (played by a straight Nick Nolte).
Together, they hatch a plan to drop the cast in to the real jungle
with real ammunition and bombs so they can be toughened up. The
plan goes pear-shaped when the director steps on a land mine and
the cast end up in the hands of a drug cartel led by a mean 10-year
old kid (yes, you read that right). Now, the actors are in a real
war movie and they have to 'find it' to make it out alive. It's
a unique take for a parody, and quite cleverly allows for a certain
amount of action which you might not normally expect in a movie
like this. However, the absolute best things in this film are Robert
Downey Jr and Tom Cruise. The former plays an Australian actor who
had a skin pigment transplant to become an African American for
his latest role, and the latter plays a foul-mouthed egomaniacal
studio boss without a conscience. Downey has a pitch-perfect accent,
both African-American and Australian, and somehow also manages to
instil the satire that playing such a ridiculous character requires.
Almost every time he's on screen it's funny. Tom Cruise also deserves
a lot of credit. He looks ugly in this film, but he's funny and
almost unrecogniseable. There has been no press on Cruise being
in this film and it works to the film's advantage as discovering
him in the film is quite entertaining, particularly his opening
scene. Nick Nolte is the straight guy in the film and does a great
job, and Matthew McConaughey is pretty good as Speedman's Hollywood
agent. "Tropic Thunder" scores points for trying something
different with this genre.
THE
BAD: Being a parody you would
expect it to be funny. Aside from a few moments here and there (mainly
whenever Robert Downey Jr or Tom Cruise are on screen), the film isn't
that funny and would have been totally boring if the action elements
weren't thrown in at well timed moments to jar our attention back
in to the film. "Tropic Thunder" would have worked better
if Stiller had made it smart instead of silly. Instead of witty dialogue,
we get gratuitous action scenes and ridiculous characters and dialogue.
I already mentioned that the chief villain of the piece is a 10-year
old kid. Stiller himself isn't that much better, trying to do a self-referential
Rambo impersonation but ultimately only has a series of dumb looks
on his face. The silliness ultimately undermines how much you can
get in to the movie; the silliness would work for a younger audience
but the problem is the gratuitous violence on display would prohibit
that younger audience from seeing the film. I felt in the end that
the film was a wasted opportunity to do something truly original.
The idea was there, the cast was there, but the final script and direction
were not.