Flirting With Disaster Movie Review
Flirting With Disaster Review

"Flirting With Disaster" Overview

Rating: R
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Dean SilversProducer : Dean Silvers
Screenwiter : , DAVID O RUSSELL
Starring : Ben Stiller,Patricia Arquette,Téa Leoni,Mary Tyler Moore,George Segal,Alan Alda,Lily Tomlin
You know, I was in a real downer of a mood when I went to see Flirting With
Disaster, but, incredibly, the raw comedy of this film could only cheer me up.
And I thought I was a cynic....
The sophomore effort of writer/director David O. Russell (whose first film,
Spanking the Monkey, was a real jaw-dropper by virtue of its title alone) is a
comedy/romance that somehow captures the feel of both a home movie and an acid
trip together. On the surface, the story of Mel Coplin (Ben Stiller) and his
search for his birth parents is a tried-and-true tale. In reality, Flirting
With Disaster has more twists than a French braid and as much comedy as, well,
as much brash and uncompromising comedy as anything else has given us this year.
Stiller is his typically wacky self but is not as overbearing as he's been in
films like If Lucy Fell and Reality Bites. Instead, Stiller's presence is
deftly underplayed as he balances the performances of his supporting stars,
which include wife Patricia Arquette, Mary Tyler Moore & George Segal as his
brash adoptive parents, Richard Jenkins as a staunch yet progressive ATF bureau
employee, Alan Alda & Lily Tomlin as Mel's real folks, and Glenn Fitzgerald as
Mel's psychotic real brother. The writing and dialogue here are fantastic, and
after a somewhat slow start, Russell's film quickly speeds into overdrive and
never lets up.
And how can I go without mentioning co-star Téa Leoni as a drool-inducing
homewrecker/adoption agency employee who all but steals the show? I can't!
Leoni is nothing short of fantastic here, and I'm so enthralled with her graces
that I'd probably watch two hours of her doing her laundry.
Russell's greatest achievement with Flirting With Disaster is his ability to
draw us into the tale he is weaving, to make a fresh and outrageous film that
is completely believable and, incredibly, ethically upstanding by its end.
It's also a pleasant reminder that, hey, no matter how miserable you are, it
really could be a lot worse... and it could turn out for the best.
The latest DVD release adds deleted scenes and outtakes to a near-classic film.
Coffee or Téa?
Reviewer: Christopher Null





