Get Smart
June 22 2008 18:23 Filed in:
Movies
I really understand
Hollywood’s penchant for grabbing on to hot TV or cult commodities
and adapting them for the big screen, many times in name only. With
the cost of making a film these days, it pays to have a built in
audience for something. This increases the chances of at least
breaking even at the box office. But for me, the real head
scratcher is when something like Get Smart gets the big screen
treatment.
Get Smart ran on network television from 1965-1970. After
that, it had moderate success in syndication, but never really had
long term staying power in reruns on the order of a
Start Trek
or Brady Bunch from the same eras. Consequently, the current
18-35 generation probably remembers little or nothing of the show.
My first exposure to the character was the 1980 film
The Nude
Bomb, which brought star
Don Adams back as Maxwell Smart.
It was not a good movie, but for a 10 year old kid like myself it
had enough slapstick, rudeness and innuendo that I found it funny
and sought out Get
Smart whenever I could.
It was slim pickings in the days before the internet and cable. It
confused issues for me as well because The Nude Bomb completely ignored the continuity of the original
series by eliminating Agent 99, played by Barbara Feldon in the
series, Max’s partner and wife in later episodes. Not only did they
get married during the course of the original series run, they gave
birth to twins in one of the final seasons. The Nude Bomb acknowledged none of this. In addition, The Nude
Bomb had absolutely no involvement from the creators of the series
Mel Brooks and Buck Henry. The makers of the current film did
employ Brooks as consultant.
There were a couple more attempts to
bring the show back in various forms. In 1989 they brought Barbara
Feldon and Don Adams back for Get Smart Again, and in 1995 another attempt to bring it back as
a weekly series on Fox failed, this time with Adams playing an
older Smart with the focus being on his son played by Andy Dick
(yep…ack).
The original series was funny for it’s time, but relied mostly on
silly humor derived from the bumblings of the inept Maxwell Smart.
It hardly classified as “timeless,” but was the first real poke at
the spy genre that had come to popularity with the James Bond
series.
So, back to my original head scratching, why bring back a dated,
half-remembered series that’s already had multiple failed attempts
at revival…a series that 9 out of 10 under 30s on the street
probably don’t even remember? The best I can guess is that they
figure that if they have Steve Carell, they can pull from his fan
base, Ann Hathaway can give it some steam, and the franchise name
of Get Smart can pull enough the 40+ crowd to pull this crap
together to turn a little profit. They probably will, but it will
be mostly on the draw of Carell.
The movie itself is pretty innocuous. It’s not awful. It’s well
made, has a handful of decent laughs, a few competent action
sequences and some rather nice performances all around. Carell is a
consummate professional, so if there is any humor to be had in a
script, he’ll work his ass off to mine it out, and he does a pretty
good job. The other gem of a performance is Alan Arkin as the Chief
of CONTROL (blah blah blah, if you need the background, CONTROL and
KAOS where the metaphors for the CIA and the KGB back in the
original series). In any case, Alan Arkin is always good,
consistently one of the most entertaining performers in film, even
when he’s waist deep in shit. In this case, he’s not waist deep in
shit, but manages to shine. Anne Hathaway, who plays Agent 99 gives
a stellar performance…well, stellar when she’s not speaking and if
you are a heterosexual male or homosexual female watching.
As an actress, she is mind-boggling average, but if there were a
film released this week that was 90 minutes of Hathaway modeling
different outfits and giving different sultry poses, I’d be there
for the 12:01AM premiere.
I also figure that it’s time to let out my dirty little secret
about Dwayne “You can stop calling me THE ROCK now” Johnson. This
guy is consistently good in just about everything I see him in.
He’s shown good comic timing, decent to solid dramatic skill, but
ultimately he has a screen presence and some serious charisma that
makes up for deficiencies he may have on the acting side. Don’t get
me wrong, it really pains me to say all this because I hate
wrestling and get immediately nauseated whenever hear about or see
people from the professional wrestling world try to make a film or
TV career, but I’ll give it up for Dwayne Johnson. I’ve really kept
a little bit of an eye on what he does since The Scorpion King, the modest prequel to The Mummy series. That was a nice little action film and he
was really part of what made it pretty entertaining. Worth seeking
out if you like films in the order of a Conan or the likes.
In addition, we also manage to get General Zod himself in tow as
the villain. Terrance Stamp is basically one of the handful of
actors you can cast if you just want to epitomize evil and
arrogance on screen.
In any case, all these elements are brought back a well as bunch of
pretty cool Cameos that I won’t spoil for you, but suffice to say
there’s a few. In addition, if you do happen to be one of
the Get Smart
faithful from the original series,
are throwbacks to the original show, thought not overdone. However,
the infamous shoe phone does get a shining moment, and there’s at
least one blatant cameo from the originally series that will whiff
right by anyone not familiar with it.
It’s should be noted that they did put a lot into the action
sequences which are generally all very well done and considerably
above average. In the end though, during the action sequences I
felt myself caring less about that and just wishing that the film
was just a little bit funnier.
In the end, I can’t recommend dropping $9.00 - $15.00 a ticket to
see this in the theater. What it does have to offer will play fine
on TV at home, but it’s worth 90 minutes when you’re flipping
around cable in a few months or editing your Netflix queue when the
time comes. Ultimately, I find that even if a movie like this
doesn’t live up to its potential, if you have any emotional
investment in the characters it’s worth a shot. Carell managed to
make that happen if only just barely. With the few half-way decent
peppered in bits of comedy I didn’t walk out hating
it.
Tags: Reviews