Let's Go to Prison Movie Review
Let's Go to Prison Review

"Let's Go to Prison" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Bob OdenkirkProducer : Marc Abraham,Matt Berenson,Paul Young
Screenwiter : Ben Garant,Thomas Lennon,Michael Patrick Jann
Starring : Will Arnett,Dax Shepard,Chi McBride,David Koechner
I can attest first-hand that there are certain facts about Let's Go to Prison
that might make it seem worthwhile. It was directed by Bob Odenkirk, the "Bob"
half of the sometimes brilliant sketch comedy show Mr. Show with Bob & David;
it was written by other sketch-comedy veterans, driving forces behind The State
and, more recently, Reno 911; and it stars Will Arnett from Arrested
Development, a show that was not sketch comedy but still favored by comedy
connoisseurs. Other loose-collective comedies of this time period, like
Talladega Nights or The 40-Year-Old Virgin, pool comedy's best and brightest to
thoroughly entertaining results. Why should this lower-wattage but still
talent-heavy film be any different?
Well, Let's Go to Prison also stars Dax Shepard, so maybe that should sound the
alarm. But Prison is actually too mediocre to explain away by the presence of
one guy from Punk'd. In fact, Shepard isn't a problem at all. He plays John
Lyshitski (the film nicks one of the saddest Farrelly brothers trademarks --
non-jokes where the very presence of the S-word functions as a de facto
punchline), a career petty criminal plagued by his own ineptitude and a hardass
judge. Before he can get revenge, the judge dies -- so naturally he frames the
judge's spoiled son, Nelson Biederman IV (Arnett), and gets himself thrown back
in jail, pretending to befriend Biederman but tormenting him behind his back.
The film trips up immediately by refusing the utilize the vastness of Arnett's
talent for creating hilariously entitled boors. Maybe the idea was to avoid
reprising his Arrested Development character -- also a spoiled jackass -- but
Nelson Biederman IV is too pathetic, too fast. There are some solid laughs
rooted in his privileged naiveté, but when you should start getting caught up
in farce, you feel sorry for him instead, and annoyed at Lyshitski's dopey plan.
Indeed, it's the kind of punchy but thin story that might work as a comic short
subject, but seems ill-conceived once it passes the thirty-minute mark.
Co-screenwriters Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon have made a side career writing
blueprints for studio dreck like The Pacifier or Herbie: Fully Loaded, but
Let's Go to Prison has a whole different kind of crumminess. Their screenplay
seems curiously, well, if not personal, of a particular sensibility. It is
crude and plodding, yes, but also dark, and cheerful about its darkness --
there are a wealth of jokes about suicide, rape, and other horrors of life in
the joint. From these depths come the occasional funny one-liners. Describing
the prison's resident white supremacist, for example, Shepard tells Arnett not
to be fooled: "Underneath all the swastikas, he's a real prick." Odd that this
off-kilter wit is displayed with such stinginess (or is it laziness?).
Odder still, the screenplay is supposedly an adapted one -- Lyshitski's
voiceover narration shoehorns in some factoids about prison life taken from a
nonfiction book called You Are Going to Prison, by Jim Hogshire. I guess the
filmmakers thought using some real-life statistics would make crude comedy into
satire. But the film's occasional chuckles have more to do with sketch-style
absurdity, such as Biederman's mumbling, absent-minded affection for the song
"Move This" by Technotronic. Moments like that -- powered by Arnett's flawless
delivery -- keep Let's Go to Prison from comedy death row. But if disappointing
alt-comedy fans is ever made illegal, the filmmakers will have to start looking
over their shoulders.
Stop, hammer time.
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Review by Jesse Hassenger
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