This Is 40 (2012) ⢠View trailer
Three stars. Rating: R, for relentless crude humor, sexual candor, pervasive language and drug use
By Derrick Bang ⢠Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 12.21.12
Some perceptive truths about marriage, mid-life crises and parental angst linger around the edges of This Is 40, but they tend to be overshadowed by Judd Apatowâs reflexive insistence on vulgar humor, crude slapstick and bewildering plot detours. Obviously, he just canât help himself.
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Pete (Paul Rudd), having failed to realize that Debbie (Leslie Mann) could use some help while getting their daughters ready for school, attempts to recover from this tactical error while Sadie (Maude Apatow, far left) and Charlotte (Iris Apatow) watch with wary amusement. |
Nor should he, I suppose, since many of his films â" either as producer, director or writer â" tend to be crowd-pleasers. But we must remember that his lengthy 21st century résumé reads very much like the gag quotient in any one of his projects: Every Bridesmaids or Superbad follows on the heels of a bomb such as Drillbit Taylor, Funny People or Get Him to the Greek ... just as the truly funny bits in This Is 40 are bookended by stuff so forced and ill-advised that we canât help wondering what Apatow was smoking that day.
Maybe thatâs why This Is 40 runs a ridiculously self-indulgent 134 minutes. With that much time on his side, and that many comedic shots in the barrel, some of the humor is bound to stick.
Although Apatow oversees a busy comedy empire, This Is 40 is only his fourth feature as director, following The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up and the tediously morose Funny People. This new film, something of a peripheral sequel to Knocked Up, focuses on the five-years-later lives of Pete and Debbie (Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann), that filmâs sidebar characters.
Except that Katherine Heigl, who played Debbieâs sister Alison in Knocked Up, is nowhere to be seen here. Apparently she got lost in translation.
As this new filmâs title suggests, events center around the ramp-up to Peteâs impending 40th birthday. Heâd normally share this milestone with Debbie, but a refusal to face the onset of middle age has prompted her to deny her own birthday; indeed, she even rolls back the clock and claims a younger age, a running gag that becomes truly hilarious during a routine doctorâs office visit, when various nurses and receptionists try to nail down her birth year.
That scene works, by the way, because Apatow goes for subtle underplaying, rather than his usual, last-row-of-the-upper-balcony broad strokes.
Age-related angst aside, Pete and Debbie arenât in a terribly happy place for several reasons, starting with financial troubles. Peteâs indie record label is hemorrhaging money because he insists on representing aging âclassic rockersâ who have no relevance to modern music fans. (In a nice nod to the real world, venerable British singer/songwriter Graham Parker plays himself and delivers several songs in various scenes.)
Debbieâs boutique clothing shop is short $ 12,000 that seems to have been skimmed by one of her two employees: knock-out sex bomb Desi (Megan Fox) or mousy Jodi (Charlyne Yi). Pete further exacerbates the cash-flow situation by continually loaning money to his mooch of a father, Larry (Albert Brooks, overplaying his patented Jewish shtick).
Plenty of money, as it turns out, and this financial issue eventually becomes quite distracting. Even without the 80 grand shoveled in Larryâs direction during the past few years, I cannot imagine how the income from two small, struggling businesses could produce the ridiculously opulent lifestyle that Pete and Debbie enjoy with their spoiled and over-privileged daughters, Sadie (Maude Apatow) and Charlotte (Iris Apatow). Their house alone is humongous, and stocked with every possible high-tech toy; Peteâs party, when it finally arrives, looks like something catered at a Beverly Hills country club.
I realize we Americans have grown accustomed to living way beyond our over-leveraged means, but this is absurd. And since Apatow never really addresses financial stupidity in his script, itâs not as if heâs taking any perceptive jabs at incompetent over-consumption.
But I digress.
Both Pete and Debbie have grown insecure about their bodies, and their sex lives, and their desperate search for âalone time.â (Peteâs solution to the latter will be recognized by every guy in the theater.) Their alternately frustrated and panicked reactions to these various traumas, large and small, are spot-on; fortysomething (and older) viewers will roar with pained recognition, while their kids â" who shouldnât be watching this tawdry movie in the first place, but I know better â" will wince and say âEwwwwwâ a lot. (Too much parental information.)
Indeed, all details relating to this age crisis, and the myriad ways our bodies begin to betray us, are by far the best part of This Is 40. Apatow has a rare gift for drawing humor, often ribald humor, from our everyday anxieties: both the minor ones that we attempt to joke about in public, and the private ones that we donât even like to share with our partners.
Iâll even grant Apatow a solid understanding of a typical family generation gap, and the tension created by an elder daughter entering her teen years, and no longer wanting anything to do with her younger sister. Apatow should know; they are his daughters (and Mann is his wife/their mother). Granted, Maude Apatowâs Sadie overplays the shrill bee-yatch card, but she has cause, having to endure such lunatic parents.
Iris Apatowâs Charlotte, in welcome contrast, delivers a far more natural and authentic performance as the sweeter younger child, prone to perceptive and quite telling comments.
Too many other stray issues, however, seem shoe-horned into the script solely to give various supporting characters and guest stars something to do. Melissa McCarthy, so funny in Bridesmaids, struggles gamely but canât leverage her hopeless cameo as the obnoxious parent of a boy who runs afoul of Debbie after leaving nasty messages on Sadieâs Facebook page. Daft as this scene is, however, itâs nothing compared to the weird place Yiâs Jodi eventually wanders, during a confrontation with Debbie.
A sequence involving Peteâs belittling behavior with a practitioner of Eastern medicine (Sam Dissanayake), when Charlotte is sidelined by an ear infection, is simply beyond the pale and painfully unfunny. Why is it in the movie?
And while we might have been amused to discover that either Pete or Debbieâs father is preoccupied by next-gen families with younger wives, playing this card with both Larry and Debbieâs estranged father, Oliver (John Lithgow), is just silly. Indeed, poor Lithgow hasnât the faintest idea how to handle his part, and no wonder; Apatow doesnât even try to justify the reasons for Oliverâs hands-off approach toward Debbie. Itâs just another inexplicable left-field detail like the size of Pete and Debbieâs house.
Then, too, Apatow often canât resist a tendency to milk a gag past the point of genuine humor. Itâs quite funny when Debbie, envious of Desiâs absolutely perfect breasts, accepts the younger womanâs offer to feel them. Initially funny, that is; the sceneâs humor begins to leak away as Debbie keeps kneading and prodding.
But, then, thatâs Apatowâs long-established formula: If something is funny for two or three seconds, then it must be even funnier when stretched to 20 seconds. Or more.
Sadly ... no.
It must be noted, however, that Fox finally has found a role perfectly suited to her limited thespic talents. Sadly, she really is little more than her bodacious bod, and the character of Desi is carefully tailored to Foxâs modest acting range.
The always engaging Chris OâDowd shines as Ronnie, one of Peteâs record label colleagues. OâDowdâs best moment comes when he and Jason Segel, also droll as Debbieâs physical trainer, wind up vying for Desiâs attentions in a swimming pool.
Lena Dunham, currently a hot commodity on HBOâs Girls, pops up as Peteâs other record label employee; Tatum OâNeal lends her voice as a Realtor during a phone call with Pete, but I doubt youâd recognize her without being told. But you will recognize Green Dayâs Billie Joe Armstrong, as an appreciate fan during one of Graham Parkerâs club gigs.
The lionâs share of screen time, however, belongs to Rudd and Mann. She does a far better job of keeping Debbie more or less grounded and genuine; her various mood swings â" and some of them are pretty wild â" never completely bury Mannâs core vulnerability. For the most part, Debbie deserves our support and empathy.
Not so Rudd, who channels yet another of his cranky, condescending, self-involved jerks. At a crisis point, after weâve spent close to two hours with this couple, Debbie wonders whether theyâd even be together today, had she not gotten pregnant with their first daughter. Pete is stuck for an answer, and that moment feels right; why would she continue to put up with him?
That awkward, devastating pause carries far more truth than the filmâs obligatory final scene, which leaves us feeling that nothing has been resolved. That may accurately reflect the real-world squabbles of mismatched couples, but itâs not terribly satisfying.
As is the case, ultimately, with much of this film.
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