At this point you know exactly what you’re getting into when
you sit down to watch a Judd Apatow movie. You’ll start out with some raucous,
improvised humor—think frequent use of the word vagina and cursing at inappropriate
moments. After a while there’s a big life complication that needs to be worked
out, and at the end everybody hugs. This is the pattern for the movies he
produces, the movies he writes, and the movies he directs. His latest opus,
“This is 40”, never strays from this formula for a moment, and while it has
worked for him in the past, it fails in comparison to his other films.
“This is 40” also has one other hallmark of an Apatow joint:
it is so much longer than it needs to be. Clocking in at two
hours and fourteen minutes, you could easily do without 30 or 40 of those
minutes. He falls in love with every little bit, with every last scene, and
holds onto it with a kung fu death grip, unwilling to leave it out, even when
it damages the overall narrative. Walk into any writing class in the world, and
the first thing you learn is that sometimes you have to edit out things that
you truly, deeply love because they have a negative impact on the pace and
shape of a story. Apatow has never learned this lesson, and his movies suffer
for it. A ton of unnecessary asides waste time—like an annoying voyage into the
lives of the staff at a boutique one character owns—and “This is 40” drags on
until the only thing you want is for them to get to the point, any point.
“This is 40” is the so-called “sort of sequel” to Apatow’s
accidental pregnancy farce “Knocked Up”. Spin off is a more accurate
description, as the film follows Pete (Paul Rudd) and Debbie (Leslie Mann),
minor characters from that film. Both are about turn 40, within a week of each
other, and the film takes the generic sitcom approach to both age and marriage.
Obviously marriage is the absolute worst thing that can happen to anyone ever,
and as soon as you turn 40, you should probably just die. One thing TV and
movies have taught me is that marriage equals a tense, sexless limbo where each
partner has fantasies about the death of the other. It’s a bland take full of
characters saying things that have been said before, with an occasional poop
joke thrown in. Pete sits on the toilet because he can’t stomach spending
another moment with his family, and Debbie doesn’t want anyone to know how old
she is, so she lies about her age, but can’t remember what age she tells
different people. It’s wacky.
Because Pete and Debbie have long since ceased any
functional communication, neither one discloses that their respective
businesses are failing. Debbie’s small clothing shop is a flop, and Pete’s
nostalgia-based record label only sold 612 copies of their last release.
Tensions at work and home, and all of these secret stresses pile up until you
know an explosion is coming. But even when things reach the boiling point the
film goes on and on and on. Every time you think “This is 40” is moving towards
a resolution it throws another unnecessary complication. You could completely
cut out the subplot with Debbie’s estranged father (John Lithgow), among
others, and not miss it for a second.
You’re supposed to feel bad for Debbie and Pete, but they’re
so fucking miserable that it’s difficult to sympathize. All they do is bicker,
they can’t stand each other, and can barely be in the same room without
clashing. It isn’t even funny banter, they’re straight up mean and say horrible,
horrible things to each other. They fight about music, they fight about money,
they fight about parents. Every word is an accusation, criticism, or attack. You
don’t really want things to work out in the end because at a fundamental level,
they just don’t like each other. All they do is lie and complain and drag each
other into quarrels. It’s the least healthy relationship you’ve ever seen, and
when their daughters (Apatow’s real life children Maude and Iris) scream for
their parents to shut up and stop fighting, you can’t help but agree.
Money trouble is something most viewers can relate to,
right? But they even make that virtually impossible to commiserate with. When
you drive a brand new BMW, your elementary school age child has a $500 iPad,
you live in a giant house in an upscale neighborhood, and
you can secretly loan your deadbeat father (Albert Brooks) $80,000 without your
wife knowing anything is amiss, it’s really, really hard to care about the
financial hole they’ve dug themselves.
There are a handful of funny moments in the movie, the best
of which are the two scenes with Melissa McCarthy (“Bridesmaids”), but overall
the humor is toothless and boring, and woefully sparse. “This is 40” limps
along, carried by the charm and charisma of Rudd and Mann, until it reaches a
lazy, simple conclusion that you see coming from the first frame. You want to
like this, primarily because the two lead actors are so likeable, but while
Apatow’s movies are usually big on heart and earnest feeling, there is none of
that in “This is 40”.
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