Paul Rudd, Tim Robinson and the art of social suicide
★★½
CTC. 100 minutes. In cinemas July 17
Friendship is a comedy of embarrassment. It may make you may laugh or, like me, you may spend most of the film muttering, 'No, don't do it.'
It's an absurdist take on male friendship. Craig Waterman (Tim Robinson) has no friends of either sex. In contrast, his wife, Tami (Kate Mara), who readily admits that their sex life is far from orgasmic, has many friends. In the film's opening scene, she's about to go out with one who also happens to be an ex-boyfriend. Craig, on the other hand, is staying home alone in front of the television, having failed to persuade their teenage son to watch the latest Marvel movie with him.
This routine changes abruptly when Craig meets the family's new neighbour, Austin Carmichael (Paul Rudd), a TV weatherman who fancies himself an adventurer. Instead of saying 'see you later' at the end of their first meeting, he points a finger at Craig and cries: 'Stay curious!'
Instantly entranced, Craig takes him seriously and Austin, deciding that he's an affable eccentric with entertainment value, starts hanging out with him. They go on adventures together and Craig begins to loosen up with predictably mortifying consequences.
The film's director, Andrew DeYoung, a friend of Robinson's, wrote the role especially for him by way of giving him the chance to elaborate on the kind of embarrassments he's been perpetrating in I Think You Should Leave Now, the sketch comedy series that has acquired a cult audience on Netflix.
The typical Robinson character knows no boundaries. He's a juvenile variation on Larry David in Curb Your Enthusiasm. Whatever you say about Larry's tin-eared response to the sensitivities of others and his tenacity in holding a grudge, he's a grown-up. Robinson, however, is stuck in pre-adolescence. He's the naughtiest kid in the class, harbouring an obsession with bodily function jokes together with a bubbling desire to shock in the most bizarre way he can dream up.
Naturally, he soon proves too much for Austin and after one particularly disastrous evening, Austin tells Craig that they're breaking up. The friendship is over.
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Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
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The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
‘A lot of wacky stuff goes on': Eric Bana goes wild, again, for Netflix murder mystery
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'And it was just like, 'We haven't seen this on film before, a murder mystery thriller investigation in a national park',' Bana says. 'That's where the idea began, and then he just started fleshing it out. 'Well, who would this person be?' Loading 'He's not based on a real character,' he hastens to add of Kyle. 'It was just the germ of the idea.' Bana is a producer as well as star of the series, and as it was in development, a real-life story was unfolding in the Australian wilderness – the so-called High Country Murders of Russell Hill and Carol Clay, for which former Jetstar pilot Greg Lynn was ultimately convicted. For Bana, that duality of the remote wilderness was part of the appeal of the Untamed story. 'A lot of wacky stuff goes on, and that plays into the psyche,' he says. 'Even if you love the outdoors, there's the element that you always feel a little bit exposed.' There's the natural aspect – which, in Australia, often means the threat of bushfire or flooding or extreme heat or cold, or simply wandering off track and becoming hopelessly lost. 'But then there's also that thing of, well, what if there's someone else out here? What about the humans, you know? So on a subconscious level, I think everyone relates to that, and we definitely were trying to tap into that.' Bana read a script for the first episode in 2018, and was immediately onboard. But it took years to get it made. Why the delay? Loading 'COVID, strikes, trends, quality, making sure we had everything right. Just all the normal things – and the abnormal ones. I've lived with Kyle for a long, long time, probably one of the longest gestation periods I've had for a character.' ISB officers generally 'don't work as part of a massive team, and they are often highly skilled in their particular areas, used to working alone', Bana says. And Kyle has that lone-wolf vibe dialled up to 11. Basically, he just doesn't like people very much, himself included. Though the park is a major character too, the series was actually shot in Canada's Whistler, which Bana had previously visited on skiing holidays with his wife and kids a couple of times, but had never seen in the warmer months. 'In the middle of summer you can't get into Yosemite because of the tourists, and the restrictions,' he says. 'We just had more freedom of movement in British Columbia.' For Bana, much of that movement was done on the back of a horse. He first learnt to ride for Troy, more than 20 years ago. 'That was a pretty intensive training period because we were bareback, no stirrups for that film. So from there, everything's pretty easy afterwards.' Sometimes he'd get to set in the backwoods by car, sometimes by chairlift. And on one memorable day, he and co-star Sam Neill rode their horses to location. 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Courier-Mail
3 hours ago
- Courier-Mail
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