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Grown Ups

kdk June 26, 2010
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Read Time:2 Minute, 43 Second

Apparently, Adam Sandler and his old Saturday Night Live buddies have grown up. They have wives and kids and mortgages and weight problems. And that must mean that their days of ogling hot chicks and giggling at fart jokes are behind them, right? Don’t count on it—because Sandler and his pals may joke about getting old and fat, but there isn’t anything particularly grown-up about the comedy in Grown Ups.



Sandler stars as Lenny Feder, a successful Hollywood agent who’s got it all: a fabulous house, a gorgeous fashion designer wife (Salma Hayek), and a couple of spoiled rotten sons who spend their days doing nothing but playing video games and texting demands to their nanny. So when Lenny’s beloved basketball coach dies, he sees it as the perfect opportunity to put their trip to Milan Fashion Week on hold and travel back east to reconnect with old friends while spending some time in the great outdoors.



The Feders end up sharing a lake house for the weekend with Lenny’s four childhood friends and their families. Kurt (Chris Rock) is now a hen-pecked stay-at-home dad. Rob (Rob Schneider) has a bad toupee and a wife who’s old enough to be his mother. Eric (Kevin James) is fat and dull, and his wife, Sally (Maria Bello), is still breast-feeding their four-year-old son. And Marcus (David Spade) is still a confirmed bachelor and party animal.



Now, I know that there’s supposed to be some sort of plot here—but, for the life of me, I can’t tell you what it is. There’s something about a 30-year-old basketball rivalry, and there’s something about Lenny wanting his kids to act like normal kids. But none of that really counts as a central plotline. Instead, it seems like the whole idea was to round up a bunch of former SNL cast members (along with Sandler’s various old-faithfuls—and Kevin James), put them together in a big cabin on a lake for a few days, roll the cameras, and see what happens. Unfortunately, what happens doesn’t have any kind of direction. It isn’t all that interesting—nor is it especially funny. It’s just an endless stream of the same old repetitive insults: Eric is fat, Rob’s wife is old, Lenny’s rich and pampered, Kurt’s a pansy, and his domineering mother-in-law (Ebony Jo-Ann) has bunions and gas.



In the few moments when the guys aren’t flinging half-assed insults at each other or generally acting like overgrown 12-year-olds, it becomes painfully obvious that there’s no real point to this random, scatterbrained mess. Without the ensemble cast of big-name comics, it probably would have been (and should have been) released back in January, with the rest of the year’s comically-challenged comedies.



I can’t really blame Sandler and his friends for wanting to get paid to hang out together at the lake—and it’s clear that they had a whole lot of fun at their little reunion. I just wish it was half as much fun to watch as it was to film.

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About Post Author

kdk

Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it. Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course. As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com). Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.
kdk@nightsandweekends.com
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kdk

Kristin Dreyer Kramer has been writing in some form or another (usually when she was supposed to be doing something else) since the ripe old age of ten—when she, her cousin, and their two Cabbage Patch Dolls formed the Poo Authors’ Club. After a short career in advertising, Kristin got sick of always saying nice things about stuff that didn’t deserve it—so now she spends her days criticizing things, and she’s much happier for it.

Since creating NightsAndWeekends.com in February of 2002, Kristin has spent her life surrounded by piles and piles of books and movies—so many that her office has become a kind of entertainment obstacle course.

As if her writing and editing responsibilities for N&W.com weren’t enough to keep her out of trouble, Kristin also hosts a number of weekly radio shows: Reel Discovery, Shelf Discovery, and On the Marquee. She’s also a proud member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association (CriticsChoice.com), the Central Ohio Film Critics Association (COFCA.org), the Online Film Critics Society (OFCS.org), and the Women Film Critics Circle (WFCC.Wordpress.com).

Kristin lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Paul, and their daughter, Anna. She welcomes questions, comments, and fan mail at kdk@nightsandweekends.com.

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