Entourage: Season Four Movie Review
Entourage: Season Four Review
"Entourage: Season Four" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark Mylod,Ken Whittingham,Seith Mann,Julian Farino,Dan AttiasProducer : Mark Wahlberg,Stephen Levinson,Doug Ellin,Rob Weiss,Denis Biggs,Wayne Carmona,Brian Burns,Dusty Kay,Lori Jo Nemhauser,Mark Mylod,Eric Weinstein,Carrie Freitas,Amy Elliott,Gary Goldman
Screenwiter : Doug Ellin,Rob Weiss,Brian Burns,Ally Musika,Dusty Kay
Starring : Adrian Grenier,Kevin Connolly,Kevin Dillon,Jerry Ferrara,Jeremy Piven,Perrey Reeves,Rex Lee,Debi Mazar
When it comes to rooting for a television character, screen actor Vincent Chase
is an easy choice. The focal point of the punchy, profane Entourage, Vinnie
(Adrian Grenier) is laid back, loyal, great with women, and superstar rich.
Maybe we dig him for all those reasons. Or perhaps it's because he lives a
lottery-ticket dream while we drool from afar. As we wipe our chins during
Entourage's fourth season, the series continues what it does well, and even
suffers through some appropriate Hollywood artifice.
Season 4 is all about Medellin, the overblown Pablo Escobar epic Vince has been
dying to make. As the season begins, the film -- a lame attempt at Scarface by
way of Blow -- is finally rolling in Colombia with Vinnie and his ever-present
homeboy trio (the dependable Kevin Connolly, Kevin Dillon, and Jerry Ferrara)
in tow.
If you enjoyed the backstage brouhaha of season 3, pitting Vince and his morals
against a studio demanding he play Aquaman again, then entering season 4 is a
bit of a letdown. The Medellin production isn't intense enough to hold average
fans, nor funny enough to pass as good satire. The main quartet is likable as
ever though, and Rhys Coiro continues to add a good dose of vitriol as tortured
filmmaker Billy Walsh.
Once back from Colombia, the series follows its tried-and-true tracks,
alternating between inside-scoop Hollywood dirt and mad male attempts to
chest-pound and get laid. It's a consistently entertaining formula, but it
feels a bit thin after 50 episodes (as a regular fan, I'm grateful for the
changes made in season 5.) At the core of the plotlines are Walsh's attempt to
get Medellin into the Cannes Film Festival and an interesting relationship
between E (Connolly) and actress Anna Faris.
Pivotal to all the shenanigans is Jeremy Piven as uber-agent Ari Gold, the
sort-of typical Hollywood glory boy who eats nails and excretes steel. Piven is
so good as Gold that he's made the character a cultural icon in just a few
short years, winning three Emmys in the process. Ari is a loyal friend, like
Vince, and a doting family man, but his seething temper and horribly crude
humor make him a perfect fit for the fellas from Queens. In season 4, he's
faced with E's growing role as Vince's manager, a rich narrative conflict that
continues to impress through season 5 too.
Aside from being the ultimate television boys' club -- without trying too hard
-- Entourage raises eyebrows with an onslaught of big stars and cameos, a
source of pride for the show's producers that's evolved with time. Season 4
standouts include Faris, Gary Busey, M. Night Shyamalan, and a riot of an
appearance by Peter Jackson.
Credit the series' writers, led by creator Doug Ellin, for beginning the season
with the making of Medellin and ending it with its big overseas premiere;
that's some solid start-to-finish storytelling for a TV series. The future
brings a more mature Entourage, but for season 4, the guys find plenty of time
to stay rich and keep buyin'.
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Review by Norm Schrager
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