Grumpy Old Men Movie Review
Grumpy Old Men Review
"Grumpy Old Men" Overview

Rating: PG
1993
Cast and Crew
Director : Donald PetrieProducer : Richard C. Berman,John Davis
Screenwiter : Mark Steven Johnson
Starring : Walter Matthau,Jack Lemmon,Ann-Margret,Burgess Meredith,Daryl Hannah,Kevin Pollak,Ossie Davis,Christopher McDonald
Grumpy Old Men, directed with general disinterest by Donald Petrie, is 100
minutes of Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon pulling pranks, calling each other
names, complaining and falling in love with Ann-Margret. I am suitably
entertained by these things. Whether or not you are will be the deciding factor
of what you think of what is ostensibly a geriatric Odd Couple.
Milking a 50-odd year rivalry, John Gustafson (Lemmon) and Max Goldman
(Matthau), for reasons where logic dare not tread, live right next to each
other in suburban Minnesota. Their lives hinge on very few things: Their kids,
fishing, grandkids, fishing, evading tax collectors, fishing, and going to the
bait shop to talk with Charlie (Ossie Davis) about fishing. That is when they
aren't being a royal pain in each other's asses.
This all changes when Ariel (Ann-Margret) moves in across the street, complete
with outside sauna and ski-mobile. This red-haired, finely aged temptress
re-invigorates both men and their playful hijinks while also stirring up the
event that caused their falling-out all those decades ago. Egged-on by
Gustafson's wily father (Burgess Meredith) and Charlie, the two men battle for
Ariel's affections as if youth itself were the reward.
"None are so old as those who have outlived enthusiasm," Thoreau once said, and
that is exactly what powers Petrie's blatantly episodic film. Scarcely more
than the aforementioned elderly update, Grumpy Old Men is a showcase for how a
comedic pairing can hold up over the years and neither Lemmon nor Matthau act
as if they're a day past their respective 1970s pinnacles. 16 years after the
film's initial release and countless midnight airings on TBS past, I still
can't help but giggle at Matthau saying "eat my shorts" or Lemmon's dance as he
makes a post-coital breakfast of eggs and Tabasco.
What ruins the fun is the prattling need for structure outside the central
rivalry. The most heinous of these distractions would be Gustafson's daughter
(Daryl Hannah) and her troubles with her on-again-off-again husband
(Christopher McDonald). The appearance of the latter would seem to be a major
factor leading to the near-tragedy that typifies the last stretch of the film.
There's also some nonsense about Gustafson owing the town thousands of dollars
that he doesn't have and Goldman's son (Kevin Pollak) running for mayor.
There aren't many great comedy duos anymore. Perhaps Will Ferrell and John C.
Reilly would qualify? The thought of the two foul-mouthed manbabies replicating
their bit in their later years certainly makes one chuckle. Of course, the
Lemmon-Matthau chemistry wasn't bulletproof: Check out the laughless Out to
Sea. Yet, in Grumpy and its similar sequel Grumpier Old Men, the chemistry
between the feuding curmudgeons provides a merciful aside from the absolute
mess of lazy direction and tired scripting that hides beneath it. That we are
now stuck without them is no laughing matter whatsoever.
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Review by Chris Cabin
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