Witless Protection Movie Review
Witless Protection Review
"Witless Protection" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Charles Robert CarnerProducer : J.P. Williams
Screenwiter : Charles Robert Carner
Starring : Larry the Cable Guy,Jenny McCarthy,Ivana Milicevic,Yaphet Kotto,Peter Stormare,Eric Roberts,Joe Mantegna
First, he gave us the interesting but incoherent Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector. It
was a film so completely devoid of intelligence that the screenplay consistently
threatened to choke on its own drool. Not to be outdone, the Blue Collar Tour vet
then went military with the mindless Delta Farce. There, he at least had Bill Engvall
and D.J. Qualls to share the blame with. Now comes Daniel Lawrence Whitney's latest
celebration of skidmarks, atomic flatulence, personal filth, and animal husbandry.
And as Witless Protection proves, the timer on this comic's 15 minutes of funnyman fame has
hit an hour and a half.
Poor dumb backwoods deputy Larry Stalder (Mr. Cable Guy). He longs to be an FBI agent,
much to the chagrin of his country-fried friends and Daisy Mae wannabe gal pal Connie's
(Jenny McCarthy). While spending a quiet morning at the local coffee house chewing the
fat, he sees a big city vixen (Ivana Milicevic) surrounded by several men in black.
Mistakenly believing she's the victim of a kidnapping, Larry springs into action.
He hijacks the lady, avoids the mystery men, and believes he has saved the day.
Unfortunately, what he doesn't know is that his hostage, an ex-number cruncher named
Madeleine, is a witness against a money skimming corporate crook named Grimsley (Peter
Stormare) and the government is doing everything it can to protect her. But Larry
is suspicious of head Fed Alonzo Mosley (Yaphet Kotto) and when a private security
guard (Eric Roberts) shows up with his own agenda, it will take all of our hero's
redneck rube resolve to crack the case and bring the bad guys to justice.
With a built-in critique in its title and a lame excuse for a comic in the lead, Witle
ss Protection should once and for all spell the end of Larry the Cable Guy's horrendous
run of Hollywood hokum. Clearly the worst of the three films in his offensive oeuvre,
this clueless collection of slobbering gags is a series of unfunny one-liners looking
for a premise to perch on and die. While he doesn't sway significantly from the persona
that won him a NASCAR nation of fans, the sleeveless stumblebum routine no longer
holds the same novelty for our star. This leaves the mindless script by director
Charles Robert Carner to provide most of the hilarity. The best it can do is offer a cameo
by Joe Mantegna as a prissy relative with the most flamboyant swish shtick this side
of Savannah.
Carner's turn behind the lens is equally weak. This is a filmmaker who still believes
that sped-up foot chase footage ala Benny Hill is the height of satire, or that the sight
of our lead dressed in nothing but a well-placed ball cap will be outrageous, not
nauseating. Actors like Stormare are forced to use ridiculous and tiresome accents
that grow more and more annoying as the plot points fall into place, and the editing
is obtrusive and awkward. There is a Family Guy feel to the dialogue, with Larry constantly
using any discussion to make his pointless comparative quips ("My hand hasn't been
this sore since the first episode of Baywatch."). In fact, there are moments when
these offhand comments actually bring the entire film to a grinding halt.
With Roberts and Kotto looking uncomfortable, Milicevic barely likable, McCarthy
channeling another movie all together, and an ending that straddles cliché and contrivance, W
itless Protection is quite possibly the worst film of 2008 -- and when you consider we've already
seen In The Name of the King, Meet the Spartans, and Fool's Gold, that's saying a lot. On stage,
reduced to a homunculus hillbilly stereotype, Larry the Cable Guy is barely tolerable.
For the crimes he commits against cinema in this movie, he shouldn't get slammed.
He should get life.
Wait, who will protect us?
Reviewer: Bill Gibron



