SISTERS
Director : Jason MooreCast : Amy Poehler, Tina Fey, Ike Barinholtz, Maya Rudolph, Dianne Wiest, James Brolin, John Cena, Madison Davenport, Greta Lee, John Leguizamo, Bobby Moynihan
Genre : Comedy
Run Time : 118 mins
Opens : 17 March 2016
Rating : NC-16 (Sexual Humour And Drug Use)
“All kinds of weather, we
stick together/The same in the rain and sun” – so crooned Rosemary Clooney in
the song Sisters from White Christmas. In this movie, comedy
duo Amy Poehler and Tina Fey play Maura and Kate Ellis respectively, sisters
who return to their childhood home in Orlando after many years. The sisters’
parents (Wiest and Brolin) have decided to sell the house, much to both
daughters’ chagrin. The freewheeling Kate coaxes Maura into helping her throw
one last blowout party at their house, affectionately nicknamed “Ellis Island”.
The many guests who show up include James (Barinholtz), a handyman whom Maura
has developed a crush on; slacker Dave (Leguizamo) and his drug dealer Pazuzu
(Cena), socially-awkward jokester Alex (Moynihan) and Kate’s high school
nemesis Brinda (Rudolph). As the bash spirals out of control, Kate’s teenage
daughter Haley (Davenport) learns of her mother’s irresponsible behaviour and
with her grandparents, attempts to intervene.
The mechanics of Poehler and Fey’s double act are
well-oiled to the point where they could rival Crosby and Hope in their heyday.
From Weekend Update and the Sarah Palin vs. Hillary Clinton sketches on Saturday Night Live (SNL) to Baby Mama and their stints hosting the Golden Globes, the
comediennes have repeatedly brought the funny. Sisters is directed by Pitch
Perfect’s Jason Moore, from a screenplay by Paula Pell, whose credits
include SNL, 30 Rock and Bridesmaids. The
supporting cast consists mostly of actors who are SNL alums or are part of the wider circle of comedians Poehler and
Fey know. A good portion of the jokes hit their target, but there’s the
hard-to-shake sense that the film leans too heavily on Poehler and Fey’s pre-existing
rapport, instead of actually generating funny scenarios for their characters to
participate in.
Sisters is an
entry in the “I don’t want to grow up (I’m a Toys “R” Us kid)” comedy subgenre.
There’s a reason characters who are unwilling to move on from their teen years
are referred to as “man-children”, because that’s mostly the dudes’ domain. It
does riff on the Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly two-hander Step-Brothers, without the over-the-top
rivalry. There are multiple points in Sisters
where it feels like the film is flailing about, yelling “hey, girls can do
stupid stuff too!” The vulgarity and gleefully reckless behaviour plus the mix
of sentimentality and sweetness come off as very sub-Bridesmaids. The climactic comedic set piece is unexpectedly
ambitious and there’s a gag involving a ballerina music box that will make
audiences cringe, chuckle and clench, but there are significant portions of the
film during which it’s spinning its wheels.
If asked to categorise the two per an old buddy movie
archetype, most audiences would pick Fey as the strait-laced one and Poehler as
the party animal. Sisters flips the
script and Fey gets multiple opportunities to make a scene and blurt out
strings of cuss words. Poehler’s Maura does exhibit the “chipper to an annoying
extent” trait she’s brought to her roles in Parks
and Recreation and Inside Out. Barinholtz’s
character is sweet, funny, capable and is very much a “dream guy” archetype but
points for not casting an Abercrombie model in the part. Wiest and Brolin are
also entertaining as the Ellis sisters’ parents, in part because they’re not
necessarily actors one would expect to show up in an over-the-top comedy.
The
partygoers are all one-dimensional, playing it up for laughs. Greta Lee shows
up as nail salon technician Hae-Won, a character who’s supposed to deconstruct
racist Korean stereotypes but ends up reinforcing them, depending on how
sensitive one is to the issue. The character’s broken English further makes
things uncomfortable and clumsy. Similarly, a group of lesbian women who show
up to the party are portrayed as stereotypically masculine, dressed in denim
and plaid and wielding power tools. It’s a disappointing lack of
sophistication, especially since writer Pell is an openly gay woman herself. John
Cena has wisely capitalised on his status as an internet meme and is proving
that he has a knack for comedy, perhaps not unlike Mark Wahlberg and Channing
Tatum.
The
chemistry that Poehler and Fey share is the foundation on which the movie is
built; it’s a shame the rest of the construction materials aren’t quite up to
snuff. It certainly could have been tighter, sharper and more focused, but it
is ultimately difficult not to be swayed by Poehler and Fey’s performances even
if they aren’t working with the best material.
Summary: It’s
far from the best use of Poehler and Fey’s talents and it tends to go for the
obvious, easy jokes, but Sisters narrowly
passes muster thanks to the duo’s irresistible chemistry.
RATING: 3
out of 5 Stars
Jedd Jong
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