Daily News header

Dinner for Schmucks DVD Review: The Moron Who Came to Dinner

By     get stories by email

A French adaptation import in which more than a little may have been lost in translation, Dinner For Schmucks is dubiously distinguished likewise by bad timing. That is, with its division of US society into suave if shrewdly calculating honcho suits and the idiotic rest of us during these economic hard times of stockbroker schemes and widespread rip-offs, mocking the masses for laughs right now is pretty much way beyond uncool.

Paul Rudd is Tim Conrad in Dinner For Schmucks, an obsessed get-ahead kind of corporate player who will do just about anything to make it up to the seventh floor of the dog eat dog food chain and his own corner office. Though the dapper private equity expert in distressed assets finds himself impeded by emotional insecurities, making it difficult to move beyond company loser status, or when making moves on his unimpressed object of matrimonial desire, Julie (Stephanie Szostak).

One day while in the act of driving and texting professional lies intended to serve as a career advancing ploy, Conrad mows down a pedestrian. The unfazed victim, who's more concerned about the condition of his already quite dead stuffed rodent, is combo IRS tax man/taxidermist geek Barry (Steve Carell), a creator of self-described elaborate 'mouse-terpieces.'

Barry then inexplicably attaches himself to Conrad, following him home and concocting excuses to never leave. Simultaneously stalking the flustered stockbroker and harboring unrequited pathological co-dependency issues too, is a one night stand nymphomaniac from years ago (Lucy Punch) who is not above ridiculously cornering Barry for kinky sex in the next room, presumably to make Conrad jealous.

When Conrad gets a surprise invite to a regular secret dinner party attended by the company rivals, which entails a bring-the best-idiot for supper contest, he grabs at the chance to ascend the corporate ladder by dragging along the more than eager Barry. Who with his dead mouse displays in tow, mistakenly believes the contest is for the most imaginative rather than actually most ridiculed gullible presenter of the evening.

Directed by Jay Roach (Austin Powers, Meet The Fockers), based on the Francis Veber (La Cage Aux Folles) French comedy The Dinner Game, and executive produced by among others, Sacha Baron Cohen, Dinner For Schmucks is more grotesque than gross-out for a change, but no less trafficking in generally crude yucks. While Carell, who switches it up from The Office's malevolent honcho to mocked nine to five underling, is the occasional best thing going here, even as he draws explicit comparisons between lost and found female sexual apparatus and chewing gum.

Dinner For Schmucks doesn't falter when it comes to truth in advertising, inviting viewers to a sit-down featuring gags that are laughing more at than with them, even if the contemptuous swells get spanked around a little as a tepid formality. Which tends to feature on this particular Moron Who Came To Dinner menu, items of predominantly bad taste.

DVD Features: Schmuck Ups-Gag Reel; Featurette: The Biggest Schmucks in the World; Deleted Scenes.

Blu-ray Extras: Featurettes: The Men Behind the Mousterpieces; Meet The Winners; Paul and Steve: The Decision-LeBron James press conference spoof.

Paramount Home Entertainment
Rated PG-13
2 stars

Prairie Miller is a multimedia journalist online, in print and on radio. Contact her through NewsBlaze.

  Please click this get stories by email button to be notified about future stories, and please leave a comment below.

If you leave a comment and it does not display within 10 seconds, please refresh the page

Related Movie Reviews News

Mel Brooks: Make a Noise captures the 86 year-young genius in all his irrepressible glory as he reminisces about his many impressive accomplishments as a writer/director/actor/lyricist/composer/producer, ranging from Get Smart to The Producers to Bl
The tragedy affords Kirk a second chance in the captain's chair, as well as an opportunity to track down the intergalactic menace and to exact a measure of retribution for his late mentor. As it turns out, Harrison isn't really a disgruntled colle
Movie Reviewer, Kam Williams shares this week's DVD releases with NewsBlaze readers around the world.
The total number of cities captured in the sample was over 500 globally. There were two non-American cities which made the top 20 (Ottawa, Ontario and London, England),
Movie reviewer, Kam Williams shares his Top Ten DVD List for the week of May 14, 2013
And the director also known as 'Raging Boll' spouts lots of sidebar opinions during this conversation, touching on Walmart, McDonalds, the Red Army Faction, globalization, Margaret Thatcher, Wikileaks, Zero Dark Thirty, Tom Cruise and Karl Marx.

 

NewsBlaze Writers Of The Month



Popular Stories This Month

newsletter logo

NewsBlaze
Copyright © 2004-2013 NewsBlaze Pty. Ltd.
Use of this website is subject to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy  | DMCA Notice               Press Room   |    Visit NewsBlaze Mobile Site