I don’t like stupid comedies and the trailer for “The
Internship” plays up all of the stupid parts so it was with some trepidation
that I went to see the latest from Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson. It’s better
than I was expecting, but that’s not saying much. This movie places a lot of
its hope on the likability of its stars, but this can only carry a two-hour
movie so far. There has to be character, story and, most importantly, an
emotional core and all are missing. The story is mostly a cliché about the wise
older generation teaching life lessons to the youngsters and any emotional
response is a manipulated tack-on at the end. And it’s unsettling to see two reasonably
gifted comic actors play clueless oldies who just can’t get the hang of this
brand-new Internet thing.
As the movie opens, a client tells longtime pals and
business partners Billy (Vaughn) and Nick (Wilson) that the company that
employed them has gone out of business. While Nick goes to work in his
brother-on-law’s mattress store, Billy searches the Web and somehow lands an
online interview with the Google people. The internship committee takes pity
and before long, Billy and Nick land at the company’s ultra-slick, wildly fun
San Francisco headquarters, where they’re forced to attend corporate
brainwashing sessions and participate in group competitions. They fall in with a crew of bright
social misfits (Dylan O’Brien, Tiya Sinclair, Tobit Raphael and Josh Brener)
and teach them life lessons by taking them out for Chinese food and then to a
strip club. All the while a haughty tech snob (Max Minghella) taunts them
cruelly, but you know he’s going to get his just desserts by the end credits. “The
Internship” is formulaic in its humor and smug and self-congratulatory in tone.
What’s to like? 6/10/13
1 comment:
This one was better than I expected but not good enough to recommend. Same old stuff from this bunch.
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