Osmosis Jones Movie Review
Osmosis Jones Review

"Osmosis Jones" Overview

Rating: PG
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Bobby Farrelly,Peter FarrellyProducer : Dennis Edwards,Bobby Farrelly,Peter Farrelly,Zak Penn,Bradley Thomas
Screenwiter : Marc Hyman
Starring : Chris Rock,Laurence Fishburne,David Hyde Pierce,Brandy Norwood,William Shatner,Molly Shannon,Chris Elliott,Bill Murray,Joel Silver,Elena Franklin
Have you ever wondered what goes on in the back of your nose when you sneeze?
The Farrelly Brothers have. And in their traditional gross-out fashion, they’d
like to show you.
There you have Osmosis Jones, a combination of clunky live action and cool,
creative animation that tries too hard to please both adults and kiddies while
journeying inside one disgusting body.
That body belongs to Frank the zookeeper (Bill Murray), a greasy, out-of-shape,
wart of a single Dad. He doesn’t exercise, his hygiene sucks, and he eats food
that’s fallen to the ground. Once we’re introduced to his unpleasant exterior,
we quickly meet his vile interior.
In a few ingenious animated sequences, Frank’s insides literally burst to life
as the “City of Frank,” complete with its own infrastructure, police
department, and greedy, corrupt mayor (nicely overdone by none other than the
voice of William Shatner). Frank’s white blood cells, led by super-slick
upstart cop Osmosis (voiced by Chris Rock), fight a constant, border
patrol-style battle against invading germs and diseases.
The central story is a gentle spoof of buddy cop movies: Jones teams up with a
high-powered cold capsule named Drix (voiced by the steady, deadpan David Hyde
Pierce) in an attempt to shut down a renegade virus (played with a mean
funkiness by Laurence Fishburne). This nasty illness is looking to make
history by offing Frank in just 48 hours, and this unlikely duo must stop him.
Even if their “fantastic voyage” takes them into a seedy nightclub in one of
Frank’s zits.
The animation, directed by former story artists Piet Kroon (The Iron Giant) and
Tom Sito (Antz), is wonderfully colorful and energetic, looking like a
spiffed-up Merrie Melodies cartoon. In fact, some of the more harmless germs
look like those little aliens in another half-animated Warner movie, Space Jam.
The biology puns, both visual and vocal, are there as is expected, with plenty
of requisite references to a litany of bodily functions including peeing and
puking (the rule seems to be: the more liquid and mucus, the better).
But with all the endless opportunity to jam-pack both the frame and the script,
Osmosis Jones is surprisingly tame. The Farrellys, and first-time screenwriter
Marc Hyman, almost appear to be holding back, not wanting to give the smaller
viewers (this is PG-rated) sensory overload. The filmmakers would rather
devote their time to juicing up the urban, radio-friendly soundtrack, which
becomes so blatant it’s annoying. So in peeling back some of the laughs,
Osmosis Jones becomes just a handful of chuckles by the film's end.
It does manage to hold interest until then, even if the live-action sequences
with Bill Murray and daughter Elena Franklin feel quickly cobbled together and
look dreadfully grainy and flat (I think all the money was spent on the
animated bits). Molly Shannon, as the daughter’s teacher, is a riot, happily
stealing both scenes in which she appears.
And, as in any movie aimed toward kids, and doubly so if directed by guys named
Farrelly, you’ll find just about every yucky body release imaginable. But,
what’s this? No fart jokes? Oh, they save those for the end. No pun intended.
You'll find more of the same on the Osmosis Jones DVD, which sports a handful
of longer/grosser deleted scenes and the usual documentaries. A commentary
track features four producers, directors, and writers, but as is often the case
with animated movies, there just isn't much to add to the telling of the tale.
In fact, you'll find the best bits in a four-minute short that focuses on the
voice work.
Do we have to say it?
Reviewer: Norm Schrager





