Farce of a Champion | Film | Phoenix | Phoenix New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Phoenix, Arizona
Navigation

Farce of a Champion

Talladega Nights (Columbia) This cut of Will Ferrell's NASCAR comedy runs 13 minutes longer than the theatrical version, and that doesn't take into account the deleted and extended scenes, outtakes, phony commercials, public-service announcements, and gag reel. A movie that already seemed to be constructed from deleted scenes is well...
Share this:
Talladega Nights (Columbia)

This cut of Will Ferrell's NASCAR comedy runs 13 minutes longer than the theatrical version, and that doesn't take into account the deleted and extended scenes, outtakes, phony commercials, public-service announcements, and gag reel. A movie that already seemed to be constructed from deleted scenes is well served by a DVD overflowing with them; watch 5 or 10 minutes, eject, rinse, and repeat till Ferrell and John C. Reilly and Sacha Baron Cohen become constant companions in the fast lane to nowhere fast. The excised footage is at least as funny as anything that actually made the final cut; how funny you find that depends upon your tolerance for Ferrell's delivery of every line like he's on the verge of cracking himself up. -- Robert Wilonsky

The Fox and the Hound 2 (Disney)

Here's a DVD for parents looking to pass along some traditional values. No, not hard work, determination, and loyalty (though they're here too) -- but the traditional values of animated characters who aren't rendered in 3D and don't spew pop-culture catch phrases at every turn. Yeah, the original Fox and the Hound wasn't exactly a classic of Disney animation, and so a sequel three decades later runs the risk of feeling superfluous. And so it is -- but it's also refreshingly old-fashioned, a tonic to the toxic irony and hipness of movies like, oh, Barnyard, which lumbers onto shelves this week. The closest Fox 2 comes to pop-culture pandering is the group of singing dogs who dream of performing at the Grand Ole Opry. There's nothing here that wouldn't have fit into a sequel had it been made 25 years ago. And that's a pretty good thing. -- Jordan Harper

The Devil Wears Prada (Fox)

No surprise that the commentary track for this adaptation of Lauren Weisberger's chick-lit best-seller features pearls of wisdom from the costume designer -- this is the Project Runway crowd's idea of a summertime blockbuster, after all. But the disc could be shorn of its 15 deleted scenes and its mini-docs and its chitchat track and still be essential; fact is, David Frankel's film is among the year's best and easily one of the finest movies about working and the price of success. And the acting's superb: Anne Hathaway charms as the put-upon assistant who blossoms in the blinding sunshine of boss Meryl Streep, who's not entirely unsympathetic in the role of cruel, contemptuous editrix. Best of all, though, is Stanley Tucci as the lone and lonely voice of reason, the caricature who refuses to crumble beneath the weight of silk that cuts like barbed wire. -- Robert Wilonsky

World Trade Center (Paramount)

Oliver Stone's retelling of the events of September 11 is too conventional for its own good -- a standard-issue disaster pic featuring protagonists who can do little more than lie in rubble and the rescue that finally came for real-life New York City Port Authority cops Will Jimeno (Michael Peña) and John McLoughlin (Nicolas Cage). Which is not to discount its ambition or intentions. But upon second viewing, I wish WTC was more than just a movie about heroism, uplift, and optimism in the face of despair -- all noble things, but also too constraining during those moments when the movie wants to reach out and roar. United 93, a superior film about the day, was a cathartic memorial. Down to the whispered DVD extras, this is almost too reverent -- an Irwin Allen movie told with restraint and solemnity. -- Robert Wilonsky

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Phoenix, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.