Step Brothers Movie Review
Step Brothers Review

"Step Brothers" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Adam McKayProducer : Will Ferrell,Adam McKay,David Householter
Screenwiter : Adam McKay,Will Ferrell
Starring : Will Ferrell,John C. Reilly,Adam Scott,Mary Steenburgen,Richard Jenkins
You know you're in trouble when the George W. Bush quote you open your movie with
("Families is where our nation finds hope, where wings take dream") gets the evening's
biggest laugh.
It's no stretch to call Adam McKay's Step Brothers the year's stupidest film. Part of me
feels bad labeling it as such, but then I remember that no movie boasting scenes
of a grown man licking dog feces really wants to be taken seriously on any level.
And yet, I'd be lying if I told you Brothers didn't make me laugh. Freed from the
shackles of having to follow an actual script -- McKay receives a "story" credit
alongside co-stars Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly, which is kind of a joke in and
of itself -- the cast can improvise with reckless abandon. But you have to tolerate
a fair share of imbecilic drivel before uncovering a few choice lines, as when Reilly
tells Ferrell his singing voice is "like a combination of Fergie and Jesus."
Brothers marks McKay's third feature-length collaboration with Ferrell, and the two
have found a formula they're comfortable with. They establish the comedian as a thin-skinned,
overgrown adolescent -- an egotistical anchorman, or a delusional NASCAR driver -- then rattle his
cage by introducing stiff competition.
Step Brothers establishes the rules of its game before you're even settled in your seat.
Robert (Richard Jenkins) and Nancy (Mary Steenburgen) meet while attending a medical
convention and bond over the fact that they both have 40-year-old boys who haven't
left the nest. Deeply in love following a whirlwind weekend, the two get married --
forcing disgruntled Brennan (Ferrell) and Dale (Reilly) to live under the same roof.
So, who are these guys? Well, Brennan's a sensitive songbird whose dream of performing
was crushed at an early age by younger brother Derek (Adam Scott, hilarious in the
role that usually goes to Will Arnett). And Dale's a bully, the petulant aggressor
whose tipping point appears whenever anyone touches his drum set. The fact that Brennan
eventually touches Dale's kit in a fit of rage comes as no surprise. What he uses
to handle the drums I'll leave for you to discover.
An ancient advertising campaign for the New York lottery used to tout, "All you need
is a dollar and a dream." Reduced to fit the Ferrell box office lottery, all you
need is a few studio dollars and a wafer-thin premise. The core of Step Brothers sounds more
like a pitch you'd bring to a studio meeting, not a finished film. And if you are
hoping this goes any deeper than the one-line summary, you're reading about the wrong
film.
After McKay and his crew thoroughly exhaust all originality in the setup, which occurs
roughly 10 minutes in, Step Brothers collapses into a haze of brutal slapstick, degrading
insults, and ghastly bodily-fluid jokes. Cheap shots for a cheap film. Brothers l
ooks like it was shot in McKay's backyard, with the cast reaching into their own
closets and filling backgrounds with vintage props bought at a neighborhood flea
market.
I'm always amazed when esteemed actors such as Kathy Bates, Robert Duvall, or Ving
Rhames agree to play hillbillies, bullies, and closeted homosexuals in Ferrell or
Adam Sandler vehicles. What scripts did Steenburgen reject so she'd have the opportunity
to blurt "What the (bleep)ing (bleep)" in this film? And if Jenkins wonders why the
Academy overlooks his intricate performance in Thomas McCarthy's The Visitor come Oscar
season, he need only pop Brothers into the nearest DVD player and skip to the scene
where he bends Ferrell over and spanks his behind.
As much as I want to dismiss this movie outright, I can't. Blind squirrels like Ferrell
and Reilly do find an occasional nut (sadly, I'm being literal). And the movie closes
on a high note, showing the buffoonish leads taking out an army of school-age bulli
es like Bruce Lee mowing down opponents in Enter the Dragon.
"I wish we had these when we were 12," Brennan says to Dale in one scene, referring
to a pair of night vision goggles the siblings wear around the house.
"Why? We have them when we're 40," Dale replies.
The character is talking about the expensive toys. But Reilly's talking about his
and Ferrell's man-child career trajectories, which show no signs of stopping.
You will notice there is no P in our OOL.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





