My Life in Ruins Movie Review
My Life in Ruins Review
"My Life in Ruins" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Donald PetrieProducer : Tom Hanks,Gary Goetzman,Rita Wilson
Screenwiter : Mike Reiss
Starring : Nia Vardalos,Richard Dreyfuss,Harland Williams,Rachel Dratch,Caroline Goodall
Nia Vardalos is the new Yakov Smirnoff. Her entire act revolves around her
European heritage -- she's Greek, while Smirnoff's a Russkie. Without it, she's
just another unemployable actress with a limited range. (See Connie and Carla,
Vardalos' flat follow-up to her breakout hit, My Big Fat Greek Wedding.)
Her latest pseudo-comedy, My Life in Ruins, demonstrates that the tired Greek
gags have taken her about as far as she's ever going to go. Even the characters
in Vardalos' pictures are begging her to quit. "You're not funny. Stop trying,"
a manager tells self-absorbed tour guide Georgia (Vardalos) as she prepares to
take a busload of imbecilic vacationers on a four-day Grecian jaunt.
Ruins treats Georgia's tour bus as a melting pot, allowing scripter Mike Reiss
to paint broad, obnoxious cultural generalities about boorish Americans
(embarrassingly awful Rachel Dratch and Harland Williams), snooty Brits
(Caroline Goodall and Ian Ogilvy), Foster's-swigging Australians (Simon Gleeson
and Natalie O'Donnell), and a hunky Greek driver sophisticatedly nicknamed
Poupi Kakas (Alexis Georgoulis). Later, we meet Poupi's nephew, Doudi Kakas
(Nacho Pérez). How ironic. A turd of a comedy making infantile poop jokes.
Reiss spent time writing for intelligent television programs like The Larry
Sanders Show and The Simpsons. Where is that wit? His Ruins belittles ignorant
idiots who prefer souvenir shopping to Parthenon tours, then panders to the
very same mouth-breathers with a moronic screenplay. Donald Petrie (Mystic
Pizza) poorly shoots Reiss' atrocious script, hammering us over the head with
obvious culture-focused punch lines. Richard Dreyfuss emerges as the film's
lone bright spot, a wisecracking widower who teaches Georgia how to lighten up
and live her life. It's not enough to make Ruins tolerable, mind you, but the
actor deserves credit for his work.
As for Petrie, he hints at his inspiration for Ruins when, on separate
instances, he shows a television tuned into Mihalis Kakogiannis' infectious
Alexis Zorbas (or Zorba the Greek), with Anthony Quinn. All it does is call
attention to a better film. Do yourself a favor: Rent that instead.
To your left, you'll see the remains of my career.
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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