In Good Company
There was once this show about the 70s. It starred a guy named Ashten who blew into this international superstar. Meanwhile, a scrawy guy stayed in the background and honed his craft. Then in 2004, he starred in a movie with Dennis "Hit or Miss" Quaid. And he performed better than Ashten could ever hope too.
In Good Company is the story of Dan Foreman (Quaid) who has been demoted in favor of Carter (Topher Grace), a man half his age. Dan has a great wife (Marg Helgenberger) and two daughters. The oldest (the stunning Scarlet Johansen) becomes romantically involved with Carter. Chaos ensues.
Acting: A
Quaid had a "hit" and Johansen was awesome as usual. The surprise for me was Grace. My family seemed to think Carter was simply Eric Foreman on the big screen, but I saw so much more. Grace filled Carter with so many layers I needed an orange peeler to get through them. He was a happy sad professional loving person who simply looked for someone or something to attach himself too. Brilliant performance by Grace.
Directing: B+
Holy Meaningful Cuts Batman. Carter's and Dan's lives were seen in constant comparison. It worked farily well, but I got a little sick of it. Each hard cut and cross fade had meaning (never did it seem he was doing it to prove he could do it) but I feel Weitz could have done it a little less. He showed it could be done. In a particular shot we see Carter and Dan worrying in thier respective offices, but the view is from outside the building. From this angle we saw, two men acting alone while together. I would have liked to have seen a little more of that, and a little less fading. Yet, Weitz did a good job. He put a lot of directorial enery succesfully into a romantic comedy--a genre where he could have gotten away with doing less.
Writing: B
The dialogue was exceptional. The characters spoke like (get this) real people. We never had to sit through the intellectual soliloquy on relationship and interaction. We saw interaction. Awesome. So why only a B? Well, the plot kind of sucked. It was too predictable and a little contrived. The writing is really saved by the dialouge, but they could have spent more time at the story board.
Special Effects: N/A
Overall: 7/10
I thought In Good Company was solid. Totally worth the five bucks to rent it. Probably not the $20 to buy it.
There was once this show about the 70s. It starred a guy named Ashten who blew into this international superstar. Meanwhile, a scrawy guy stayed in the background and honed his craft. Then in 2004, he starred in a movie with Dennis "Hit or Miss" Quaid. And he performed better than Ashten could ever hope too.
In Good Company is the story of Dan Foreman (Quaid) who has been demoted in favor of Carter (Topher Grace), a man half his age. Dan has a great wife (Marg Helgenberger) and two daughters. The oldest (the stunning Scarlet Johansen) becomes romantically involved with Carter. Chaos ensues.
Acting: A
Quaid had a "hit" and Johansen was awesome as usual. The surprise for me was Grace. My family seemed to think Carter was simply Eric Foreman on the big screen, but I saw so much more. Grace filled Carter with so many layers I needed an orange peeler to get through them. He was a happy sad professional loving person who simply looked for someone or something to attach himself too. Brilliant performance by Grace.
Directing: B+
Holy Meaningful Cuts Batman. Carter's and Dan's lives were seen in constant comparison. It worked farily well, but I got a little sick of it. Each hard cut and cross fade had meaning (never did it seem he was doing it to prove he could do it) but I feel Weitz could have done it a little less. He showed it could be done. In a particular shot we see Carter and Dan worrying in thier respective offices, but the view is from outside the building. From this angle we saw, two men acting alone while together. I would have liked to have seen a little more of that, and a little less fading. Yet, Weitz did a good job. He put a lot of directorial enery succesfully into a romantic comedy--a genre where he could have gotten away with doing less.
Writing: B
The dialogue was exceptional. The characters spoke like (get this) real people. We never had to sit through the intellectual soliloquy on relationship and interaction. We saw interaction. Awesome. So why only a B? Well, the plot kind of sucked. It was too predictable and a little contrived. The writing is really saved by the dialouge, but they could have spent more time at the story board.
Special Effects: N/A
Overall: 7/10
I thought In Good Company was solid. Totally worth the five bucks to rent it. Probably not the $20 to buy it.
__________________
"What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present." - T.S. Eliot
"What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present." - T.S. Eliot
Last edited by gohansrage; 07-17-06 at 02:18 AM.