Sunday, February 22, 2015

Stand-Up Comedians in Movies and Simon Sez (1999)



This week’s Sunday “Bad” Movie is Simon Sez.  It’s a movie from 1999 that was one of two starring vehicles for basketball player Dennis Rodman.  One of the first topics I debated writing about was athletes in movies.  The problem is that I already covered that topic when I watched the movie Gymkata.  Since then, I haven’t watched enough movies starring athletes to possibly fill another post.  To go over that topic again without anything to add would be to beat a dead horse.  This is especially true because I don’t feel the need to improve upon that one.  This all means that I had to come up with a better course of action for writing this post.  What would the topic be, if not athletes in movies?  I thought for a while before landing on something similar, yet at the same time completely different.  I turned away from Dennis Rodman and set my sights on his co-star, Dane Cook.

So the topic of this week’s post is going to be stand-up comedians in movies.  Now, I know this is going to be an odd entry in the Sunday “Bad” Movies because in many cases, stand-up comedians aren’t that bad in movies.  However, many of their careers are interesting to look at from a bad movie point of view.  Though many stand-up comedians have good movies that they are in, they tend to also have their fair share of stinkers in their filmography.  I would like to take a look at the lower end of some stand-up comedians’ film careers.

One of the first comedians that comes to mind when I think of careers that took a nosedive in quality is Eddie Murphy.  He came to prominence in the early 1980s as the breakout star of Dick Ebersol’s era of Saturday Night Live.  He lit up the stage every time he appeared on it.  You might be saying to yourself that sketch comedy like Saturday Night Live is not stand-up comedy.  To that, I counter with Eddie Murphy’s two stand-up comedy films: Raw and Delirious.  Those highlighted how great (albeit offensive by today’s politically correct, equality driven culture) he was as a stand-up performer.  His talents in both stand-up and sketch comedy would soon land him a slew of popular film roles in movies that included Trading Places, 48Hrs, and Beverly Hills Cop.  But somewhere along the way, Murphy’s career took a severe dive as he began starring in movies like The Adventures of Pluto Nash, Meet Dave, and Norbit.  As much as everyone still likes Eddie Murphy as a personality, most of his more recent work is nowhere near the quality that it was in the 1980s.  He lost his comedic mojo somewhere and cannot seem to get it back.

Robin Williams is another interesting stand-up comedian to look at when you think about the highs and lows of a career.  He is nowhere near as binary as Eddie Murphy, though.  For every bad movie, he would have a better one to follow.  It wasn’t a total decline in quality.  If Robin Williams made an RV, he would make a movie like One Hour Photo.  If he made Old Dogs, he would make a World’s Greatest Dad.  He would make cheesy family comedies that were critically panned while also being featured in work that would push the boundaries of what you expected out of him.  That doesn’t forgive the License to Weds of his career but makes the pill easier to swallow.  His presence in movies both good and bad make it easy to forget that the man who gave us a Flubber remake came from stand-up.  Robin Williams was one of the people behind Comic Relief.  Hell, when they said goodbye to him at the Emmys, the clip they ended with was from his stand-up.  That’s enough about Robin.  Let’s move onto a few people known more for their stand-up than their films.

You can’t open up your Netflix account without being bombarded with stand-up specials of Kevin Hart.  They tell you about how “Seriously Funny” he his.  He apparently has a huge following which has allowed him to make the transition into film.  Last year’s Ride Along and this year’s The Wedding Ringer have helped to establish him as a Hollywood star.  Things haven’t always been this way for Mr. Hart though.  I still remember seeing him in the mid-2000s in a supporting role in Scary Movie 3 and Scary Movie 4.  It’s a wonder that anyone’s careers flourished after that, but Anna Faris and Charlie Sheen were successful on television after that.  Meanwhile, Kevin Hart went from talking about how a person can’t wake up dead to movie stardom.  So far, his career has seemed to take the opposite trajectory of Eddie Murphy’s.  (Can I go one entry without bringing Eddie up?)

Then you have Louis C.K.  No, I don’t believe he has had a starring role in a movie.  He’s had bit parts like a security guard in Role Models or that guy in American Hustle.  If he’s been the star of a movie, the movie is slipping my mind right now.  He’s more focused on television, what with the HBO show he had years ago, and the FX show he has garnered a lot of critical acclaim for more recently.  What I really want to bring up, however, is that he’s the man behind the classic Pootie Tang.  He wrote and directed it.  That is one interesting movie.  And it is a unique movie.  I’ve never seen anything that was written in a similar way to it.  It is the true brilliance of Louis C.K. that a movie like that could even exist.  I don’t necessarily consider it a bad movie, but it’s weird enough that only a small portion of the movie watching audience would enjoy it.  It’s an outlier, and I would be willing to feature it in these blog posts at some point.

The final stand-up comedian that I want to feature is the guy that inspired this post.  First, I want to talk about the part of his film career that he is known for, then I will get to why I think that Simon Sez is worse.  In the mid-2000s, Dane Cook became a popular mainstream comedian.  He was everywhere.  He hosted Saturday Night Live multiple times.  He had stand-up specials.  People were mimicking him to their friends.  And he had a series of movies (not a franchise, just a few movies) that he starred in that never really gained the critical acclaim that was likely desired.  Good Luck Chuck fizzled and has become more of a punchline than a movie that people want to see.  Employee of the Month has been all but forgotten.  My Best Friend’s Girl was forgotten before it came out.  And then there’s Mr. Brooks.  Let’s not talk about this.  These were his four big movies, I’d say, and none of them hit in the way that his stand-up comedy had.  It was as unsuccessful an attempt at breaking into film as I’ve seen any stand-up comedian have.

Simon Sez was before all this, though, and it is a wonder that he was ever given the chance at starring in movies again.  This was 1999.  It was before the big surge of Dane Cook that I am familiar with.  The performance was insane.  The physical comedy of it was so over the top that it made Jim Carrey look tame.  Not that Jim Carrey is in Simon Sez.  He’s not.  But Dane Cook is, and he’s giving the worst performance of his career as a failed spy.  He isn’t suited to action at all, and the comedy is so hokey that he barely fits into that either.  It’s like if his stand-up routine had sex with itself and produced inbred offspring with the negative mutations.  It was terrible.  And I’m terrible for writing that comparison.  Yuck.  It was one of the worst performances by someone who I’ve seen actually act well in other movies.  And let’s just leave it at that.

I guess that stand-up comedians are just like any other working actor that graces the screen.  They make good movies and they make bad movies.  They have good performances and bad performances.  Many of them manage to hold their own as movie talents.  You’ve got Eddie Murphy, Kevin Hart, Robin Williams, and many others including Billy Crystal, Tim Allen, and Jay Mohr.  They’ve all made a name for themselves in movies, even if only for a brief period of time.  Stand-up comedians don’t suffer from the same sort of issues as athletes.  Their stage presence and ability to time jokes lends itself better to film than an athlete’s ability to get a ball in a net.  So, in the end, this post isn’t as successful as I had hoped it would be.  Oh well.  I tried.  Can you blame me for trying it?
There are, of course, some notes before this post ends:

  • Here’s the post for Gymkata.
  • Simon Sez was suggested by @JaimeBurchardt.  He also suggested the movies House of the Dead and Monster Brawl.
  • Dane Cook inspired the post.  He was in Simon Sez.  He previously appeared in the Sunday “Bad” Movie titled Torque.
  • Kevin Elders, the director of Simon Sez had a bit part in the movie.  He also wrote Iron Eagle and had a bit part in that movie.
  • Have you seen Simon Sez?  Have you seen some of the bad movies from any of the comedians I wrote about?  Do you feel like stand-up comedians make good or bad actors?  If you have anything to say related to this post in any way, feel free to comment below.
  • You can also comment if you have any suggestions for movies that I should watch for the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  You could also Tweet me anything bad movie related, or email me at sundaybadmovies@gmail.com.
  • Next week’s movie is the terrible Death Bed: The Bed That Eats.  I did this one to myself and I don’t regret it one bit, though I wish I had those 77 minutes back.

No comments:

Post a Comment