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Genre:
Comedy Action
Director:
Peter Segal
Certificate: Get Smart was rated
12A by the Irish Film Censor's Office (www.ifco.ie)
i.e. suitable for persons aged 12 or over. Those under the age of 12
must be accompanied by an adult.
Violence = moderate. Drugs = none.
Sex/Nudity = mild. Language = mild.
OFFICIAL WEBSITE:
Get Smart
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Get Smart, a spy guy tale of good vs. evil and Smart vs. dumb. Get
Smart should follow their own advice when it comes to the script, the
acting and the action.
After overcoming personal obstacles, Maxwell Smart (Steve Carell) would
give almost anything to be a field agent for Control, a covert American
agency who battles the evil group KAOS. After his overwhelming talent
gets him stuck as an analyst, he finally gets his break when Control is
infiltrated and The Chief (Alan Arkin) gives him the bump to agent. He is
assigned to be the partner of the beautiful and bad-ass Agent 99 (Anne
Hathaway). Together they take on KAOS and try to stop them from handing
out nuclear weapons like candy and killing exposed Control agents.
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Buy at AllPosters.com
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There are a few
scenes, particularly pertaining to our current presidential situation,
that earned a hearty chuckle. A few non-electoral scenes also went
over well. How can you not laugh at “Holy Shit! Holy Shit! A sword
fish almost went through my head!”
Even still, it’s
obvious throughout the movie that director Peter Segal and writers Tom
J. Astle and Matt Ember are desperately struggling to create moments
of brilliance and silly splendor. Like a swimmer fighting a rip
tide, their attempts only make Get Smart exhausting. The situational
jokes are that a five year old boy might think up, and the visuals are
often childish and shallow.
Character writers Mel
Brooks and Buck Henry did a terrible job with Maxwell Smart. They
can’t decide if he is a misunderstood savant or a total idiot.
Maxwell Smart often wavers between what might be called slight
retardation and exposing his hidden super spy talents. Steve Carell
is sometimes charming and sometimes grating but Maxwell is so poorly
written, it is a constant push-pull tug of war and is impossible for
the audience to know if we are supposed to admire or loathe Maxwell
and Carell. |
Agent 99’s character
development isn’t smooth sailing either. Distant and pissed off one
minute, she succumbs to her desires as easily as a drunk catholic school
girl. There is no reason for the change, nothing really happens and yet
we are supposed to believe Agent 99 just throws in the towel and changes
in one second? Oh, please.
Get Smart isn’t entirely
horrific; it’s just average and unremarkable in every way. The acting is
fine. The camera work is adequate. The direction is common. There is
not much for the audience to take away. There is no succulence, no flavor
or depth. There is no take away for the audience, even a bad one. I felt
like I walked into the theater the same as I walked in, only two hours
older.
Stay two hours younger,
skip Get Smart. Watch it when you’re doing your dishes and it runs on the
local television station.
Reviewed by
LaRae Meadows,
Premier Movie
Reviews 2008
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