REVIEW: You can forgive me for not being especially excited to see HERE COMES THE BOOM. To put it mildly, Kevin James’ filmography does not inspire, with PAUL BLART: MALL COP and ZOOKEEPER being among the very worst Hollywood has had to offer in the last few years. But, whether it’s his own love of MMA (James has reportedly dabbled in it for years) or a new found confidence as a leading man/producer, HERE COMES THE BOOM ain’t half bad. In fact, I’d wager it’s easily the best thing Adam Sandler’s production shingle, Happy Madison has produced in at least a decade.
James is inspired to step in the ring once the school’s nice-guy music teacher, played by Henry Winkler (The Fonz!) is threatened with losing his job and tenure- despite being newly saddled with a much-younger, and pregnant wife. James, who moonlights as a citizenship teacher, gets the idea from his ex-UFC fighter student, Nico (real-life UFC champ Bas Rutten) to give MMA a go, thinking he’ll take a few dives, raise some cash and move on.
Of course, HERE COMES THE BOOM is a comedy first, and a ROCKY/WARRIOR-style flick second, and perhaps that’s the problem. BOOM works a whole lot better when aiming at the heart than at the funny bone, and I can’t say that any of the jokes were particularly funny, although for an ex-fighter, Rutten seems game to poke fun at himself. Perhaps James and Loeb realized this, as the focus suddenly shifts in the final act, which is when, for me anyways, the film really started to work as more than just a diverting ninety minutes.
Continuing the new, “suddenly cool” vibe, James also gives himself quite the on-screen love interest, with him finding time to woo the school’s incredibly hot nurse, played by Salma Hayek, who as always never looks anything less than perfect. Considering that she’s one of the hottest women on the planet, one might assume she’d be a bit hard to swallow as James’ love interest, but she’s always had a non-pretentious earthiness which makes it OK. At least she doesn’t immediately fall for him, although there’s little doubt the film will end in an on-screen clinch.
So- while HERE COMES THE BOOM didn’t really work for me as a comedy, there’s enough of a feel-good underdog story at it’s core to give the film a lot of heart. It really may surprise a lot of folks who might be expecting another run-of-the-mill James vehicle. While I still don’t really find James particularly funny, HERE COMES THE BOOM reveals there’s more to him than you’d think given his track record.