*** 1/2 out of 5
114 minutes
Rated PG for some crude comments, language and action violence
20th Century Fox
Article first published as Movie Review: 'The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013)' on Blogcritics.
Say what you want about Ben Stiller’s choice of starring roles, the
man can direct the hell out of a movie. While his spot in the director’s
chair may be few and far between — see Reality Bites, The Cable Guy, Zoolander, and Tropic Thunder — it should come as no surprise to see a high level of craftsmanship brought to his latest endeavor: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.
Remaking the 1947 Danny Kaye film — itself based on James Thurber’s
1939 short story — Stiller seems to have the same problem as his
protagonist of having big dreams without the ambition. I blame the
film’s shortcomings on the fact that Stiller didn’t write the film
—Steve Conrad did— but that didn’t stop him from making The Cable Guy nothing short of a cult classic. (That one wasn’t written by him either.)
The
real life of Walter Mitty (Stiller) involves zoning out and lots of
daydreaming. The first time we see this happen he misses his train to
the city as he hears a fire truck nearby and leaps from the train
station through the air, hurtling through a building window and saves a
dog from a fire. More of these outrageous sequences are to come.
Walter works at Life magazine which is coming to an end. Ted
Hendricks (Adam Scott) has been brought in to downsize the print
department as the magazine heads online. Walter has received a package
from photojounalist Sean O’Connell (Sean Penn) including a wallet as a
gift and film negatives featuring an elusive number 25 that has gone
missing but Sean says will be top consideration for the last magazine
cover. Now, Walter uses the help of unrequited office love interest
Cheryl Melhoff (Kristen Wiig) to track Sean down and find the missing
negative.
Turning the film into a travelogue, Stiller takes Walter to Greenland
where his childhood love of skateboarding almost gets him killed in a
volcano eruption, but not after a trip on a helicopter with a drunken
pilot, and fighting a shark. A set piece featuring a street fight
between Walter and Ted rips off Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, but has the kind of energy the film starts lacking once Walter heads off on his mission to find Sean.
I won’t even get started on the technological inaccuracies running
rampant. Something most viewers won’t even notice anyway. Stiller and
Wiig make an appealing romantic couple and Scott is hilarious as the
office jerk who cares more about how he’s going to explain things to the
executives than the staff. Unfortunately, the film has bigger
intentions than Stiller knows what to do with, but as one of few
family-oriented films being released this holiday season, at least it’s a
better than usual option. And seeing how The Secret Life of Walter Mitty features an oceanic shark fight, it still has that going for it.
Photos courtesy 20th Century Fox
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