Land of the Lost Movie Review
Land of the Lost Review
"Land of the Lost" Overview

Rating: 12
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Brad SilberlingProducer : Jimmy Miller, Sid Krofft, Marty Krofft
Screenwiter : Chris Henchy, Dennis McNicholas
Starring : Will Ferrell,Anna Friel,Danny McBride,Jorma Taccone,Matt Lauer,Leonard Nimoy,John Boylan,Bobb'e J Thompson
Although you can see the filmmakers trying to pay homage to Sid & Marty
Krofft's nutty 1970s TV series, this film is just too random and silly to make
any sense at all. Although there are a few laughs along the way.
After a humiliating appearance on TV, Dr Rick Marshall (Ferrell) continues with
his research into time travel, seeking a parallel dimension where past, present
and future all mix together. The missing ingredient turns out to be a
sexy-brainy assistant, namely Holly (Friel), who urges him to test his
invention. They're zapped into chaotic jungle-desert world along with the
clueless Will (McBride). While looking for a way home, they team up with
monkey-boy Cha-Ka (Taccone) and encounter a psycho T-rex and an army of lizard
men.
Ferrell can do this kind of wackiness in his sleep; indeed, he often seems to
be dozing off during this film as this food-obsessed, showtune-loving sketch
comedy character. Fortunately, he's terrific at offhanded improv, making it
feel utterly effortless. Friel and McBride must work a little harder opposite
him, but both have hilarious moments along the way as the plucky scientist and
up-for-anything chucklehead.
Around them, director Silberling blends first-rate effects and visually
arresting images along with alien creatures who look like men in homemade
costumes. This is obviously meant as a nod to the original TV show, but the
strange mix is more of a distraction than a gag. And the whole film feels
utterly random, like the script was loosely outlined by 10-year-old boys and
then never fleshed out. It's essentially a bundle of silly set pieces
punctuated by running gags about bodily fluids and Holly's breasts.
This parallel world has no internal logic, but neither does any single scene.
We don't really expect logic in a goofy movie like this, but is it too much to
ask why Holly speaks fluent monkey-language only some of the time? And while
there are plenty of amusing moments (the vampire mosquito, the T-rex pole
vault), there's not a single big laugh. Or any real reason for this film to
have been made, for that matter.
|
Review by Rich Cline
|






