Spy Hard Movie Review
Spy Hard Review
"Spy Hard" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1996
Cast and Crew
Director : Rick FriedbergProducer : Rick Friedberg,Doug Draizin,Jeffrey Konvitz
Screenwiter : Rick Friedberg,Dick Chudnow,Jason Friedberg,Aaron Seltzer
Starring : Leslie Nielsen,Andy Griffith,Nicollette Sheridan
Ugh. This is one of those reviews where I don't really know how to begin.
Suffice it to say that I should have listened to all the friends of mine who
refused to go see Spy Hard with me, saying that it wasn't their style, that
star Leslie Nielsen had lost his comedic sense, or that the movie just plain
looked bad.
They were all right.
Spy Hard is the most recent in Nielsen's franchise of spoof films, parodying
the Bond genre and about a dozen other movies along the way, including In the
Line of Fire, Cliffhanger, Speed, True Lies, Pulp Fiction, and even Sister Act
and Home Alone. I won't bother recounting the negligible plotline, except to
say that it involves two good guys (Nielsen as Dick Steele, "Agent WD-40," and
Nicollette Sheridan as Veronique Ukrinsky, "Agent 3.14") and one bad guy (a
masterfully cast Andy Griffith).
Here is what's funny about Spy Hard: "Weird Al" Yankovic's opening credit
sequence and Andy Griffith's presence during his eight or so lines of dialogue.
What's not funny? Everything else.
Basically because the writers (and there were four of them) chose to play for
cheap laughs instead of extended humor value, the film fails like a linebacker
in a calculus exam. Director Rick Friedberg has absolutely no sense of comedic
timing, and even the editing works against the film to lessen the impact of the
jokes. It's almost an exercise in how to do everything wrong.
The best spy spoof out there is Top Secret!, Val Kilmer's homage to the
war/Elvis movie and true laugh-a-minute material. Trust me, it's simply much
better for you.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



