BAD NEIGHBOURS
2014
Genre: Comedy
Run Time: 96 minutes
Starring: Seth Rogen,
Rose Byrne, Zac Efron, Dave Franco, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Craig Roberts,
Ike Barinholtz, Lisa Kudrow
Directed by: Nicholas
Stoller
You can’t choose your family, and it turns out you can’t
choose your neighbours either – except perhaps if you can buy out the whole row
of houses. In this comedy, new parents Mac (Rogen) and Kelly (Byrne) don’t have
that luxury. With an infant on their hands, they’re horrified when the Delta
Psi Beta fraternity moves into the house next door, since it means endless loud
parties and no peace for them or their baby girl. Mac and Kelly initially try
to keep things civil between them and the fraternity president Teddy (Efron),
but things soon get out of hand as the couple and the frat boys repeatedly
clash, deciding the street isn’t big enough for both their groups.
The film is titled Neighbors
but is being released as Bad
Neighbours in the UK, Australia and other territories presumably to avoid
confusion with the long-running soap opera Neighbours.
Director Nicholas Stoller is an oft-collaborator of Judd Apatow, having
directed R-rated comedies Forgetting
Sarah Marshall, its spin-off Get Him
to the Greek and The Five Year
Engagement. As can be expected, there is no shortage of wanton ribaldry on
display in Bad Neighbours, every
scene featuring large quantities of profanity, drugs, sex and nudity in any
number of combinations. If lowbrow, American
Pie-esque humour isn’t your cup of tea (or bong of weed, rather), it’s best
to give this a wide berth. But if you’ve got no problem with lactation gags and
3D-printed dildos, this is the flick for you.
The problem with many films of this genre is that the
characters can be pretty detestable and it’s hard to enjoy their antics when
you just can’t relate to them or root for them. By any standards, the
characters in Bad Neighbours are not
good people: Mac and Kelly are irresponsible, hard-partying parents and Teddy
and his frat brothers are inconsiderate, lunk-headed jerks. Teddy even has his
frat symbol tattooed on his bicep. However, they end up pretty likeable and
somehow, it’s hard to stay mad at these guys and it becomes surprisingly easy
to go along with the over the top gags and the sophomoric silliness thanks to
the performances the cast turn in.
Seth Rogen essentially plays himself once again – a
schlubby, pot-smoking “hurr hurr” type – but he’s entertaining and funny while
he’s at it and he and Zac Efron throw themselves into their crazy feud. This is
far more Zac Efron’s wheelhouse than dramas like At Any Price and Charlie St.
Cloud. He gets to goof off and show off that MTV Movie Awared-winning physique,
charming but never repulsively smug. Once again Rose Byrne more than proves her
versatility, holding her own opposite (and often stealing the show from) Efron
and Rogen, gamely partaking in the juvenile hijinks without looking like she’d
rather not be there. Dave Franco makes for an excellent foil to Efron as
Teddy’s wingman Pete, their friendship/rivalry given surprising depth.
Bad
Neighbours unfolds in an episodic, somewhat predictable fashion and is far from a
sophisticated affair but it manages to be amusing and engaging and some
moviegoers will probably end up enjoying this one in spite of themselves.
There’s a scene early in the movie in which Mac and Teddy discuss their
favourite cinematic versions of Batman, Mac favouring Michael Keaton with Teddy
preferring Christian Bale. It’s a moderately clever way of demonstrating a
generational gap and the film tackles the worries of moving on from college to
a job and a family without becoming sentimental goop. And hey, when “warring
neighbours” comedies like Deck the Halls
exist, you could certainly do worse than hanging out with Rogen, Efron, Byrne
and co.
Summary: These bad neighbours
make for a pretty good time!
RATING: 3.5 out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
Jedd Jong
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.