Waking Up in Reno Movie Review
Waking Up in Reno Review

"Waking Up in Reno" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Jordan BradyProducer : Ben Myron,Robert Salerno,Dwight Yoakam
Screenwiter : Brent Briscoe,Mark Fauser
Starring : Charlize Theron,Patrick Swayze,Natasha Richardson,Billy Bob Thornton
There are bad movies, and there are awful movies. And then there is Waking Up
in Reno, one of the worst films ever made, so bad it had to be delayed
theatrically at least a couple of times before finally grossing about $260,000
in theaters.
Swept Away more than doubled that.
Is it Charlize Theron's crimped hairdo? Billy Bob Thornton's beard and
sideburns? Natasha Richardson's painfully bad "southern" accent? Or is it
just Patrick Swayze?
Everyone's to blame here and more, namely owing to a script from Brent Briscoe
and Mark Fauser (last film: Hillbilly Heist) and director Jordan Brady's
(played "Teen Boy" on Baywatch) inability to realize that all of the above
mentioned are as awful as they are. Perhaps he is deaf and blind. Perhaps
Hasslehoff hit him. If not, he should.
Reno is a sex comedy (and yes, I realize that three of its four stars are not
sexy). As you might expect, it is set in Reno (again, penny slots and monster
truck rallies just aren't sexy). In lieu of Wayne Newton, the obligatory
crooner we get is... wait for it... Tony Orlando.
All of these elements come together when two couples (match them yourself) go
on vacation, where it's revealed that two of them are cheating on the other
two. Oopsie. Thornton's used car salesman proposes the other two sleep with
each other for revenge... or something.
The revelation comes an hour into the picture and just about kills the
dying-since-frame-one movie altogether. It's not just humorless, it's
insulting. It's plain to see with the bigwigs at Miramax put the movie out to
pasture. It's just a shame they didn't choose to kill it before it ever got
photographed.
Want extra suffering? Check out the deleted scenes, making-of featurette, and
-- I swear to God -- feature length commentary track. Ladies and gentleman, I
pronounce irony officially dead.
Hey, my career prospects are getting even thinner than you!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





