I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With Movie Review
I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With Review
"I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Jeff GarlinProducer : David Miner,Harold Ramis,Rob Kolson,Erin O'Malley,Jeff Garlin,Steve Pink
Screenwiter : Jeff Garlin
Starring : Jeff Garlin,Sarah Silverman,Richard Kind,Bonnie Hunt,David Pasquesi,Tim Kazurinsky,Mina Kolb,Dan Castellaneta,Paul Mazursky,Aaron Carter
As the affably larcenous and willing-to-please foil to Larry David on Curb Your
Enthusiasm, Jeff Garlin has it easier than just about anybody on the show,
usually having to do little more than spread his arms and protest with a
baffled "Whaaat?!" or "Come ahn!" to get a laugh. David panics, Garlin gripes;
it's a good mix. What works well for a sidekick, of course, is usually night
and day from what works for a lead. This issue crops up repeatedly in I Want
Someone to Eat Cheese With, directed, written by, and starring Garlin, who
ambles the streets of Chicago, bouncing from rejection to odd (but funny)
scenario to rejection again with the same resigned air. The laughs come, but
with hardly anybody able to get a rise out of this guy, they're more like quiet
chuckles when they could be explosive.
I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With is a genial piece of work that is not much
more than a sequence of barely-connected riffs. This should be perfectly fine
for most people watching, as the majority of the riffs star good people who
seem perfectly happy to hang out and improv some well-calibrated chaos with
Garlin. He plays 39-year-old James, a Chicago comic who’s still living with his
mom and eking out an existence as an improv comic and occasional actor. With no
girlfriend and having just lost out a part in a remake of Marty to Aaron
Carter, James moons about the city in a lovelorn fashion and suffers through a
series of low-level professional and romantic humiliations. These stages of
plot exist not so much to illustrate James' dark night of the soul as to
provide stages for the high-grade performers Garlin talked into coming out to
play. Second City notables like Bonnie Hunt, Dan Castellaneta, and Tim
Kazurinsky are given pride of place, and there are good turns from Richard Kind
and Roger Bart -- though the cameo rotation gets excessive with one scene in
particular that's obviously jammed in there just to give Amy Sedaris a reason
to show up.
Like all the improv greats, Garlin is able to milk an impressive batch of
comedy out of thin material, and he gets pretty far on not much. The closest
thing to a real story here is a spotty and masochistic relationship with an ice
cream shop worker played by Sarah Silverman, who as usual is able to mask
breathtaking cruelty with a cute little grin. Most of the rest of the time,
James is walking around the city and chatting with his random encounters in a
manner that lets native-son Garlin show off the city (and just not its
filmed-to-death tourist highlights, a la The Break-Up) as few other hometown
filmmakers are able to do.
While Garlin's film, which wraps its scattershot comic romance in a sincere
love letter to Chicago and its improv comedy scene, gets a respectable number
of laughs out of its barely visible premise, and is hardly the vanity project
that might have been expected, it never stretches itself, either. Good improv
plays on the familiar, while great improv stuns and bewilders audiences with
the unexpected; I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With is only good, which should be
less disappointing than it is.
Reviewed at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival.
Is that gouda?
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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