The Animal Movie Review
The Animal Review

"The Animal" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Luke GreenfieldProducer : Barry Bernardi,Carr D’Angelo,Todd Garner
Screenwiter : Tom Brady,Rob Schneider
Starring Rob Schneider, Colleen Haskell, Michael Canton, John C Mcginley, Ed Asner
It’s always a shame when good comedic talent goes bad, and a pleasant surprise
when that finally lands a decent role in a funny film. Nothing has been
expected of Rob Schneider since his departure from the hellhole of mind-numbing
roles like the Copy Guy Richmeister and the Weed Guy on Saturday Night Live, as
well as bit parts in ridiculous Muppet Movie sequels and Adam Sandler
comedies. But Rob Schneider is a funny man. I remember watching him at the
Improv in San Diego when I was 12 years old and laughing my ass off at his
brilliant portrayal of Elvis on a fishhook. I was 12, but what the hey?
Modern comedy comes from its ability to not take its story or its characters
seriously. The Farrelly brothers and Woody Allen have taught us that. Recent
failures like Joe Dirt and Schneider's last film Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo owe
themselves to a seriousness they try to create by treating their main
characters as martyrs for the audience to sympathize with and pity. The Animal
does no such thing, avoiding this common mistake totally and developing into an
enjoyable and hilarious 90 minutes.
Our tale: Marvin Mage (Schnieder) is a loser to the tenth degree. He makes
Screech from Saved by the Bell look like a romantic lead in a Shakespearean
tragedy. Stuck with the lowly job of file clerk for the local police force,
Marvin longs for the glory and honor of becoming a real police officer like his
dearly departed father. When Marvin answers a 911-robbery call, he ends up in
one of the funniest car crashes ever imprinted on celluloid. A deranged
scientist (Michael Canton) rescues Marvin from the wreckage, rebuilds his body
RoboCop-style with animal parts (refugees from a traveling Mexican circus), and
Marvin's newfound animal instincts naturally kick into full effect when he’s
released back into the general population.
Stupid? Yes. I just never would have thought a cross-dressing monkey doing
the moonwalk would be so damn funny.
Marvin meets and falls in love with the chick from the first season of Survivor
(Colleen Haskell), uses his extra-keen sense of smell to sniff out drugs from
perpetrators’ rectal areas, rescues a drowning boy Flipper-style, consumes
enough Slim Jims to keep Macho Man Randy Savage happy, humps a mailbox, and
tries to make sweet love to a goat in heat. Again: Stupid? Yes. But the
bizarre situations dreamed up by screenwriters Schneider and Tom Brady work,
and Schneider sells it for all he's worth. Trust me --it's funny. Very
funny. I'm almost ashamed that I laughed out loud so much.
The only real problem is that it all falls apart in the end, a good idea
stretched way beyond its limits. The script degrades with too many plot
twists, relying on cameos from Norm Macdonald and Adam Sandler for comic relief
in its last 20 minutes. In the end, it's, ahem, beating a dead horse.
With The Animal under his belt, Schneider demonstrates that the innate comedic
talent I witnessed years ago is still down there somewhere. Let’s just hope
this isn’t a fluke for the Richmeister.
Would you believe they put a man's head in the moon?
Reviewer: Max Messier





