Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) Movie Review
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005) Review

"Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005)" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Doug LimanProducer : Lucas Foster,Akiva Goldsman,Eric McLeod,Arnon Milchan,Patrick Wachsberger
Screenwiter : Simon Kinberg
Starring : Brad Pitt,Angelina Jolie,Vince Vaughn
It will go down in infamy as the film that split up Brad and Jen -- assuming
that 10 or 20 years from now people still remember the headline-making legacy
of the ill-fated Pitt-Aniston marriage.
Unfortunately for gossip fiends, Mr. & Mrs. Smith doesn't really bear any mark
of Angelina Jolie as homewrecker or of Brad Pitt as any more infatuated with
the lippy screen queen than any normal, red-blooded man ought to be. And
fortunately for moviegoers, Smith (wholly unrelated to the 1941 Hitchcock film
of the same name) is a funny and wild ride, an impressive blend of black
comedy, ultraviolence, and romance that we rarely get to see -- and which rarer
still is any good.
It's an extremely high-concept setup, flirting with the point of absurdity and
edging back from the brink: Pitt is John Smith, Jolie is his wife Jane. Both
work as assassins, and both think their spouse is none the wiser. It's a
marriage of convenience so each can run off to kill someone then be back in
time for dinner, but it's all based on lies (and secret stashes of guns, bombs,
and throwing knives hidden throughout the house). Eventually, the scam
unravels, and the Smiths find themselves tasked with offing each other.
Sure, you saw that twist coming, and Smith makes few apologies for being more
about the killing than the writing, but underneath the gore (and there's plenty
of it), you'll find a surprisingly witty film punctuated by some truly humorous
bits, even if the jokes tend toward the obvious and the plot drifts into a
familiar repetition of kill/kiss/laugh/kill/kiss/laugh. If The Long Kiss
Goodnight had been thought out a little more fully and with an ear for comedy,
it might have ended up looking something like this. Director Doug Liman -- once
associated with comedies like Swingers has now become the go-to director for
the thinking man's action film (see also The Bourne Identity).
Pitt and Jolie are both good-with-moments-of-greatness, acting very
professional and having fun with the bone-dry humor of their roles. But it is,
as usual, Vince Vaughn who steals the show as a compatriot of Pitt's (don't
waste too much energy trying to figure out if he's John's boss, who's "good"
and who's "bad," or much of anything else… the meta-information is never really
unveiled and doesn't stand up to much scrutiny). Vaughn is mainly just playing
Vaughn, but his interplay with Pitt and with his perpetually off-screen mother
is priceless. It's worth the price of admission on its own.
Be advised that Smith is a deeply violent film, and fans expecting a
lighthearted romance with a smattering of playful gunfire will be shocked to
see Pitt kicking the living crap out of Jolie -- though rest assured she holds
her own in the end. (Jolie gets about three times as many punches in on Pitt
than he gets on her. Double standard? You be the judge.)
If you're the kind of person that sees the humor in the Darwin Awards, videos
of people falling over and breaking limbs, and a good old-fashioned kick to the
nuts, Mr. & Mrs. Smith is a film for you. It certainly doesn't hurt if you
think that Angelina Jolie is smokin' hot.
Chop chop!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





