Mr. Woodcock Movie Review
Mr. Woodcock Review

"Mr. Woodcock" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Craig GillespieProducer : Bob Cooper
Screenwiter : Michael Carnes,Josh Gilbert
Starring : Billy Bob Thornton,Seann William Scott,Susan Sarandon,Ethan Suplee,Amy Poehler
For half of the last decade, Billy Bob Thornton has been filling the
scumbag/jerk quotient to dwindling effect, culminating in last year's abysmal
School for Scoundrels. One half-expected him to try and nab a role in a
Catherine Breillat film just to get the taste out of his mouth. It seems this
was all wishful thinking: Thornton's latest retread into berating fat kids,
retards, and asthma victims, Mr. Woodcock, is at once both completely aimless
and without the slightest sense of fun.
Pushed back and up for almost a year now, Woodcock comes from a lineage of
productions so misguided that studios eventually release them just to wash
their hands of them. Originally slated for a late spring/early summer release,
the film was tossed back to November to allow for re-shoots and new edits.
Ultimately none of it mattered and they pushed it back up to September. The
fact that Wedding Crashers ace David Dobkin was brought in for the
aforementioned re-shoots makes the absence of even the lightest chuckle even
more profound.
Thornton plays the titular gym coach who gets his jollies from pegging kids
with a carefully selected basketball before bemoaning their physical abilities.
One such child, the plumpest of the lot, is little John Farley, who is
relegated to stand Woodcock's indignations while in his tighty-whities. Farley
(now Seann William Scott) grows up to be a self-help guru with an agent (Amy
Poehler) who acts like Cerberus guarding the gates of hell around her client.
When news comes that his hometown is bestowing the Corn Cob Key to the City on
him, Farley gears up to fly home and see his mom (Susan Sarandon). Not a minute
passes between his reunion with his mother and his mother introducing him to
her fiancée: Mr. Woodcock.
What follows is an oedipal tug of war between John and Woodcock, the majority
of which finds Woodcock schooling the self-help pansy. Farley collects an old
friend (Ethan Suplee) to help him find ways to oust his stepfather-to-be as a
demon in a track suit. But every gag rails on like an infuriating metronome
trying every way imagineable to pry a laugh out of your chest. If it's not
Woodcock's "rhetorical question" shtick, it’s the preposterously unfunny
"Woodcock's nailing your mom?" line, used ad nauseum.
Thornton's scumbag-with-a-point characters have been commendable because they
work well within the confines given. As this cantankerous coach, Thornton seems
to have drifted into a trance, unable to find the glee in being a bastard. As
for Sarandon and Scott, it's evident they're just in it for the check. The
bigger problem: Director Craig Gillespie, who shows immense promise in the
upcoming Lars and the Real Girl, goes 180 here and demonstrates an utter
incapability with comedic structure and timing. Stuck inside a script by
first-timers Josh Gilbert and Michael Carnes, Thornton feels like he's been put
on a leash and his boredom is palpable. Even the audience can feel it.
Mommy always called him princess.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





