Stripes Movie Review
Stripes Review
"Stripes" Overview

Rating: R
1981
Cast and Crew
Director : Ivan ReitmanProducer : Daniel Goldberg,van Reitman
Screenwiter : Len Blum,Daniel Goldberg,Harold Ramis
Starring : Bill Murray,Harold Ramis,Warren Oates,P.J. Soles,Sean Young,John Candy,John Larroquette,John Voldstad,John Diehl,Lance LeGault,Roberta Leighton,Conrad Dunn,Judge Reinhold,Antone Pagan
This sloppy but popular comedy stands just behind Bill Murray's best movies --
Caddyshack, Ghostbusters, Groundhog Day, Lost in Translation -- in quality, but
stands with them in establishing the film comedy as we now know it:
irony-soaked, lowbrow, and funny. As late as the mid-'70s, too many film
comedies were earnest, cute throwbacks without a single real laugh. (Thank God
for Mel Brooks, who made the only consistently funny comedies of the decade.)
Supposedly hilarious films like Shampoo and The Goodbye Girl (or insert another
'70s comedy here… I'm having trouble remembering any of them) now seem naïve
and lame -- all the more so for trying to be trendy and sophisticated. Such
films tried harder to please the critics than the crowds, not by being highbrow
but by being frothy.
All that was dead the moment Bill Murray threw the candy bar in the pool in
Caddyshack. Critics hated Caddyshack, and called Saturday Night Live skits
"mean-spirited," but for everyone else, it was finally OK to be crude, clever,
offensive -- and funny. Subsequent films like Stripes, often featuring one or
more cast members from SNL (Murray, et al.) or Second City TV (Harold Ramis,
John Candy), set the mold. The formula hasn't needed much tweaking since then,
either; the successful comedies of recent years (There's Something About Mary,
American Pie, etc.) owe everything to them.
Compared to the glibness of Caddyshack or the anarchy of Animal House, Stripes
may seem like something of an underachievement, but it's still a pretty funny
movie. (It's a lot better than the first Murray/Ramis/Reitman collaboration,
Meatballs). Lazy loser Murray can’t hold down a job as a cab driver, so he and
his friend (Ramis) join the Army. Their platoon is predictably full of wacky
characters and their drill sergeant (Warren Oates) predictably chews Murray's
butt. Then the sergeant gets wounded by friendly fire, and Murray pulls the
platoon together with an appropriately stupid speech ("We're American soldiers…
We're 10 and 1!"). They graduate from basic training and in a gratuitous plot
turn (one of the worst third acts in movie history), they are rewarded by being
shipped off to Europe to guard the Army's new "urban assault vehicle," a motor
home with mounted machineguns. (Apparently screenwriter Ramis got tired of
milking stock Army gags before he had filled up two hours of screen time.)
Murray's insouciant performance carries the movie and has inspired countless
imitators, from the young Tom Hanks to Jim Carrey and Will Ferrell. His
ever-ironic delivery made even throwaway lines ("Chicks dig me because I rarely
wear underwear and when I do, it's usually something unusual.") instantly
quotable. Too funny to be forgotten, Stripes is still enjoyable two decades
later.
The new extended cut restores 18 minutes of deleted scenes (viewable
separately, as well), including P.J. Soles' soon-to-be-famous nude scene and
some truly bizarre side stories. Interviews and making-of documentaries round
out the disc.
Reviewer: David Bezanson





