PLOT: Tim (Paul Rudd), an up and coming young executive, is given a shot at a big promotion but first, he’ll have to participate in his boss` monthly “Dinner for Idiots.” A cruel evening dedicated to making fun of misfits, Tim is reluctant to participate until he meets Barry (Steve Carrell) a moronic IRS worker, who, after a chance encounter, begins to systematically destroy Tim`s life.
REVIEW: I walked into DINNER FOR SCHMUCKS expecting to hate it. A remake of the French comedy classic, LE DINER DE CONS, this isn’t the first time one of French director Francis Veber`s movies have been remade as an American film. Previous attempts have ranged from good (THREE MEN AND A BABY), to mediocre (FATHERS DAY) to terrible (THREE FUGITIVES, PURE LUCK).
Its obvious that these two genuinely enjoy working together, and they play off each other wonderfully, particularly during the early scenes where Tim`s just being clued into what a force of nature Barry is. There`s a scene about midway through where Barry, having destroyed Tim`s relationship with his beautiful girlfriend, Julie (Stephanie Szostak), tries to help him impress an eccentric Swiss investor (hilariously played with more than a hint of casual European aristocratic cruelty by David Walliams of LITTLE BRITAIN) that almost had people in the theater rolling in the aisles. It`s a hilarious comedic set piece that, without Carell and Rudd playing off each other so wonderfully, could have fallen dreadfully flat.
Special note must also be made of FLIGHT OF THE CONCORDS star Jermaine Clement, who’s hilarious as the pretentious artist, with designs on Tim’s girlfriend. We also get newly minted comedy mega star Zach Galifianakis as Carell’s “mind reading” nemesis, and their climatic, and moronic duel is pretty damn funny.
I’d say DINNER FOR SCHMUCKS is a solid choice if you’re interested in seeing a slight, inoffensive comedy, with a good number of chuckles and guffaws. Probably the only amazing thing about it was that the filmmakers were somehow able to pony up the cash to include The Beatles’ ‘The Fool On The Hill’ on the soundtrack (and the original recording to boot not an I AM SAM style crap cover). Still, it gets the job done, so if you’re a Carell or Rudd fan, by all means, have at it!
RATING: 6.5/10