I Spy Movie Review
I Spy Review

"I Spy" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Betty ThomasProducer : Betty Thomas,Jenno Topping,Mario Kassar,Andrew Vajna
Screenwiter : Cormac Wibberly,Marianne Wibberley,Jay Scherick,David Ronn
Starring : Eddie Murphy,Owen Wilson,Famke Janssen,Malcolm McDowell,Gary Cole
I Spy is based on a popular 1960s television show by the same name where two
mismatched spies, one white (Robert Culp) and one black (Bill Cosby), engage in
wild antics to fight evil around the world. For a series during the middle of
the civil rights era, it was considered groundbreaking. Unfortunately, the
movie version completely disrespects this inventiveness of the original
series. In fact, the movie is thoroughly insulting.
Owen Wilson is Alex Scott, a second-rate super-spy for the BNS (think CIA, I
guess), who is always relegated to the department’s least desirable
assignments. Other BNS spies, like the suave Bond-like Carlos (Gary Cole), are
equipped with the most sophisticated spy tools and receive the most attractive
jobs. Scott’s newest mission though, requires him to travel to Budapest,
Hungary with beautiful fellow agent Rachel Wright (Famke Janssen) to prevent
the sale of an invisible stealth spy plane. Some of the world's worst
criminals have gathered in Budapest for a party sponsored by criminal
mastermind Gundars (Malcolm McDowell). He plans to sell this plane during the
celebration for an upcoming boxing match, which happens to involve the wildly
flamboyant American featherweight boxing champion Kelly Robinson (Eddie
Murphy). The BNS officials recruit Robinson to help Scott and Wright get into
the party and accomplish their mission.
Talk about a mission impossible! For the entire movie, Scott and Robinson
fight and argue like children about every facet of their assignment. I Spy is
so stale and void of anything clever that it solely relies on outbursts between
the two to generate comedy. This generic formula of teaming two individuals
from different worlds who only bicker has been used in countless other films,
and rarely passes as comedy. Here it’s just plain annoying!
The concept of taking a civilian and turning him into a spy is already stale
and was used once this year along, in Bad Company. In that movie, a CIA
special agent played by Anthony Hopkins recruits a street hustler (Chris Rock)
to complete an unfinished mission conducted by his recently killed secret agent
twin brother. Bad Company suffers from many of the same problems as Spy, but
director Joel Schumacher’s film is much more true to life by showing Rock’s
character in extensive training before the mission. I Spy jumps right into the
action with not so much as a mention of the complexity of the operation to
Robinson, let alone some training sessions.
In the television series, Culp was a playboy who masqueraded as a tennis pro,
while the better-educated and professional Cosby acted as Culp’s trainer.
These roles are completely reversed for the film version. Murphy plays the
hotshot athlete because he is black, while Wilson is the white, highly-educated
spy. I would think a modern day film could avoid the casting of its leads in
stereotypical roles, especially when the original handed them the twist 40
years prior.
There are a few engaging action sequences, but there are far too many plot
holes, useless subplots, and mind-numbing exchanges between Wilson and the
totally obnoxious Murphy to make up for the film's flaws. The duo's comedic
timing never hits, and the two stars produce no shred of discernable
chemistry. I Spy is implausible, utterly ridiculous, and absolutely unfunny.
It's one of the year's worst films.
KO'd in round one.
Reviewer: David Levine





