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Click
Movie Stats & Links |
Starring: |
Adam Sandler, Kate
Beckinsale, Christopher Walken |
MPAA Rated: |
PG-13 |
Released By: |
Columbia Pictures |
Web Site: |
www.controlyouruniverse.com |
Kiddie Movie: |
It actually gets
kind of sad. |
Date Movie: |
This is a toss-up.
It's not really funny, but actually more of a drama.
Good luck. |
Gratuitous Sex: |
Michael skips
through foreplay. Good for him, bad for her. |
Gratuitous
Violence: |
Nah. |
Action: |
Nah. |
Laughs: |
Ehh. |
Memorable
Scene: |
I saw the rest of
the movie in my head from the time Michael's head rested on
the "Bed, Bath, & Beyond" bed. |
Memorable
Quote: |
None. |
Directed By: |
Frank Coraci |
Produced By: |
Jack Giarraputo, Steve Koren, Neal H. Moritz, Mark
O'Keefe, Adam Sandler |
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Click
A Movie Review |
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If you do not want to read any spoilers about this movie,
"Click," stop reading now, because for this movie I have no
problem giving away key plot points, and I will be quick to
give some key plot points right away in this review. I will
even give you my rating now so you don’t have to continue if
you don’t want to, and for "Click" I give the movie 1 ½
stars out of 5. It does have some funnies, but not many, and
Kate Beckinsale is smoking hot and pretty much the movie
gets 1 ½ stars because of her and the fact that she likes to
role-play, but that’s another story for another time.
"Click" gives us Adam Sandler as Michael, in a movie that
had a lot of potential to just be a funny, goofy movie, but
tried to get way too preachy, and it didn’t work. As it is,
Michael is an architect in a firm where he is trying to get
the next promotion. His boss is Mr. Ammer (David Hasselhoff).
As such he has to work too much and sacrifice family time
for getting the next project done. At home things are
hectic, with his two kids, and his smokin’ hot wife, Donna (Beckinsale).
Time after time Michael misses family things because of work
things, and somehow every remote control for the family is
in his family room. That’s right, you’ve got the remote for
the ceiling fan, the remote for the garage door, the remote
for a remote-controlled car, etc. The remote that seems to
be missing is the remote for the TV, and when he really
needs this remote he heads to the place in the middle of the
night that you would think would have a Universal Remote,
"Bed, Bath, and Beyond." Alright, it is the only store that
is open this late at night. Well, Michael gets there, meets
a creepy dude, and lays down on a bed proclaiming he is
tired. This is the instant that I lost it because I knew,
from there, that the rest of the movie was pretty much a
dream, although the movie folks tried to show, in the end,
it wasn’t.
So Michael, now in his dream-state, finds a door labeled
"Beyond," and he finds Morty (Christopher Walken), who gives
Michael the Universal Remote he has been looking for. This
remote isn’t just for his TV, it’s for his life. It can
control the volume of his dog’s barking, it can let him
fast-forward through fights with his wife, it can
fast-forward, well, pretty much this remote is all about the
fast-forwarding, and it learns what Michael wants to
fast-forward through, and then does so automatically.
Suddenly Michael is fast-forwarding through his life, a lot
of times at ten years at a time, and wondering how he got
divorced from his wife, how his little girl grew up into a
hottie with big boobs, how his dog died, how he got fat, and
how he ends up at his son’s wedding. And so, yes, with the
help of Morty, he learns his lesson, that he shouldn’t have
made his life about work, that he should have made his life
about his family, and in his last, dying breath (doesn’t
this sound like a great comedy), he tries to convince his
son that going on his honeymoon is more important than going
to a business meeting.
Next thing you know, Michael wakes up.
Yup, there Michael is, in the bed in the "Bed, Bath and
Beyond" he found himself "tired" in, realizing his life
isn’t over, that he can make it better, if only he becomes a
family man instead of letting Mr. Ammer rule his life. Ahh,
lessoned learned, but to try to say "Michael wasn’t
dreaming," when Michael gets back home from "Bed, Bath and
Beyond," low-and-behold, there on the kitchen table, it the
"Universal" remote, and a note from "Morty," asking Michael
if he knows how to use the remote know. Duh, Michael throws
the remote in the trash (could a sequel be there if the
movie makes enough money?).
There have been way-too-many movies proclaiming that you
should make sure you spend time with your family as opposed
to your work, and a lot of them did a decent job. This movie
didn’t because it publicized itself as a movie about a dude
getting a remote control that can control his life, and it
is supposed to be funny. Instead it ends up a
way-to-sort-of-serious movie, preaching the importance of
family. And even with the funny, it wasn’t really funny.
There was a way overdone subplot of the family dog humping a
giant, stuffed duck; The funny moments were pretty much
already in the trailer; and one of my gauges as to how good
a movie will be still holds true – when they publicize the
hell out of the movie, it will leave a lot to be desired.
What sort of makes me sad is that Adam Sandler can be
very funny, but lately he has been involved with movies that
just fail to remember how to make the funny and instead try
to get a little serious. The little kids were great in the
movie, and Kate Beckinsale, just being the gorgeous dudette
she is, left me getting this movie above the 1 star mark, so
like I said at the beginning, it’s 1 ½ stars out of 5 for
"Click." I’m almost afraid Adam Sandler has lost the funny.
That would be too bad.
That’s it for this one! I’m The Dude on the Right!!
L8R!!! |