A Guy Thing Movie Review
A Guy Thing Review

"A Guy Thing" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Chris KochProducer : David Ladd,David Nicksay
Screenwiter : Greg Glienna
Starring : Jason Lee,Julia Stiles,Selma Blair,James Brolin,Julie Hagerty
It’s a week before you get married, and your bachelor party isn’t treating you
right. Someone called strippers, and that makes you a bit uncomfortable. But
one of the strippers is so awkward and cute that you can’t help but take her
home and sleep with her. You’re comfortable with that.
So goes the curious event that A Guy Thing -- a well-meaning but almost
completely worthless trip through a minefield of infidelity, masculinity and
self discovery -- is based upon.
The thing is, A Guy Thing’s plot does not get any more believable as it
progresses. It’s powered by an increasingly hard to believe series of
coincidences, so flagrantly employed that you might even start to believe that
A Guy Thing is a clever parody of mindless romantic comedies. After finding
Becky (Julia Stiles) in his bed and rushing her out of his apartment, Paul
(Jason Lee) almost immediately bumps into her working a tollbooth. Then he’s
forced to confront her again at his engagement party, where Becky turns out to
be the cousin of his fiancée Karen (Selma Blair). Becky’s stalker cop
ex-boyfriend spots her with this new guy and decides to beat the crap out of
Paul on the street. A wild and unlikely description of a mugger actually turns
up a suspect, who also drives the cab in the final scene. The priest who lives
in Paul’s building, who has seen this whole farce unfold before his eyes, ends
up as the substitute official at the wedding. I could go on, but trying to
cobble these chance occurrences as a story -- let alone an intelligent comment
on genre films -- overlooks the fact that A Guy Thing just bulldozes along,
stringing together incomprehensible events without purpose.
A Guy Thing floats the requisite clues that let us know that Karen might not be
“the one” -- her motherly order of “seatbelts” strap Paul in physically and
emotionally and Paul’s car radio is always tuned to conversations of divorce on
talk radio. Paul’s brother fawns over Karen, giving the audience some idea of
what the right man for her would be like. So you know it’s only a matter of
time before Paul realizes he should be with Becky, the fun-loving, job-jumping,
Chinese-speaking cousin next door.
A Guy Thing places Paul among different (and not always appealing) examples of
masculinity -- the pumped up aggressive cop, the dopey and lascivious best
friend, the uptight and lonely brother, the alpha-male-future-father-in-law --
hoping he will choose one model of manhood and stick with it. Instead, he
stumbles through the film totally boggled and without any concept of who he is
and what he wants. Paul is such a schmuck that not only can you not understand
what the free-spirited and beautiful Becky sees in him, but you have no
interest in seeing him win out in the end. In one scene, we are forced to watch
Paul throw himself into a dumpster on the demand of Becky’s steroid-fueled
psycho ex-boyfriend. Ugh. He is so confused and inactive it’s a wonder that he
was able to convince anyone to be with him, let alone have to choose from two
beautiful and vibrant women.
Critics will invariably coo about how warm and funny Julia Stiles is, how this
talented young actor is an asset to popular film. However, she has so little to
work with in A Guy Thing that none of her talent is ever really on display. Her
character has little quirks that are never explained, her character being given
the depth of a wading pool.
In fact, most performances featured in A Guy Thing are developed through a
series of declaratives, such as “I’m the uptight brother,” “You’re the crazy
one,” and “I am not stupid.” Never mind that the behavior of the characters
tells us otherwise.
Thomas Lennon delivers the best performance as Peter, the uber-repressed but
obviously smitten brother of the groom. He’s the only actor in A Guy Thing that
pretends to remain involved with a scene when the camera is not pointing
directly at him. The film’s only moment of honest sentiment comes when Peter
realizes something the audience has known for the length of the film, and comes
through with a spontaneous and heartfelt a capella rendering of “Islands in the
Stream.”
At the point of Paul’s crucial transformation he says, “I’ve been playing it
safe. Everything I do is safe.” A Guy Thing sticks so close to convention, and
without any elegance or control, that the filmmakers could have only been
thinking the same thing.
Strong enough for a man, but made for a woman.
Reviewer: Aaron Lazenby





