Bedazzled (2000) Movie Review
Bedazzled (2000) Review

"Bedazzled (2000)" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Harold RamisProducer : Trevor Albert,Harold Ramis
Screenwiter : Larry Gelbart,Harold Ramis,Peter Tolan
Starring : Brendan Fraser,Elizabeth Hurley,Frances O'Connor,Gabriel Casseus,Orlando Jones,Rudolf Martin
There truly is nothing quite like a Brendan Fraser movie, is there? Encino
Man, Dudley Do-Right, Mrs. Winterbourne... these are the films that a
generation uses to mark the passage of time.
It's nigh time we added another sparkling gem to the 30-picture oeuvre that is
The Brendan Fraser Experience... and that gem is Bedazzled, a limp remake of a
1967 Dudley Moore vehicle -- a Dudley Moore vehicle which was also co-written
by Dudley Moore. Just so you know we're working with some stellar raw material
here.
The high concept of Bedazzled gives us Elizabeth Hurley as the devil (Peter
Cook played him in the original), who gives Fraser's über-nerd Elliot seven
wishes in exchange for his soul. Hurley makes a surprisingly believable
Satan. Up close, her angular features and hollow gaze make her as frightening
as she is gorgeous, not to mention the annoying bouncy walk that makes you
dizzy to watch and a wardrobe change factor that clocks in at once every six
minutes.
Elliot dreams up every wish he can think of to try to make his office crush
Allison (Frances O'Connor) fall for him. Soon he's a Columbian drug lord, then
a basketball star, then an effete socialite. But naturally, that darned devil
somehow makes it all go wrong! Elliot needs to watch more episodes of
Bewitched! to learn the dangers of wishing improperly.
As each wish turns out worse than the last, we are offered the chance to laugh
at the wacky antics on display before us. Look, Elliot can suddenly speak
Spanish! Look, Elliot suddenly speaks like a moron! Look, Elliot is suddenly
very smart! Of course, you may choose not to laugh at many of these scenes if
you wish. I know I didn't.
Bedazzled drags its one-joke scenes through far too many poorly-timed comic
moments, with each of its hokey-jokey sequences going on for far longer than is
humanly funny (notably one scene about Elliot having been given a small willy
becomes truly painful). Of course, I guess this is unavoidable if you're
simply trying to pad out 90 minutes of screen time with something.
To try and spice things up, director Harold Ramis inserts the supporting cast
of Elliot's co-workers into each vignette, where they reappear as new
characters. Wow, inventive! Then there are numerous and utterly bizarre
"comedy" moments, complete non-sequiturs to the film, which are used as
interludes between each "wish" sequence. Mostly this consists of Hurley's
devil causing traffic accidents, etc. You know, just for kicks.
And what's with Frances O'Connor as the romantic lead? O'Connor, best known
(okay, solely known) for starring in the recent Mansfield Park, with her
jutting forehead and wallflower stage presence, makes for a love interest about
as exciting as a wet brick. Jeez, why not have Hurley and Fraser get it on? I
guess we'd bust through PG-13 with something like that.
Aside from a few juvenile giggles, there's not much in Bedazzled worth
mentioning. The movie is so limp it is all but forgotten on the ride home. So
what was I saying?
What, you want some pithy comment? It's Hurley in a skimpy outfit while Fraser
looks confused. Now that's a movie.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





