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Yes Man

Rated - 3.5 stars

There is nothing remotely Christmassy about the new Jim Carrey movie – released in cinemas on Boxing Day – but it is a film of great good cheer.

It’s been a while since Carrey did an out and out comedy – unless you count Fun With Dick and Jane, which we don’t. Yes Man isn’t going to figure in any top ten lists or Oscar prognostications, but it takes a simple idea and runs with it, reminding us how Carrey became such a big star in the first place.

Carl Allen is a bank loans officer (like Stanley in The Mask), a divorcee who lives alone and prefers it that way. He’d rather watch 300 or Transformers at home than venture out for a drink with friends. He’s switched off, like his mobile.

Would a guy like this get himself to a lecture on the powers of positive thinking? Probably. Who else do the self-appointed self-help gurus feed on, if not the lonely and the miserable, or those who suspect they might be? In a variation on the role he played in Bowfinger, Terence Stamp makes a masterly (and very funny) pitch for the joys of "Yes", and Carl is browbeaten into signing on. Within minutes of the meeting he’s given a homeless guy a lift to the middle of nowhere, meekly handed over his cash, and found himself stranded. Good karma kicks in when he bumps into Allison (Zooey Deschanel), a kindly kook on scooter. Maybe there is something to this "Just say Yes" ethos after all…

At any rate, we would like to think so. In reality, Carl would probably be destitute or in prison before the week was out – unless he had a book and BBC TV deal to back him up, like Danny Wallace, who gave this idea a whirl a few years ago.

The screenwriters have ditched almost all of Wallace’s non-fiction book in moving it to California and grooming the material for Carrey (Wallace went to Amsterdam, Carl takes the first flight out of LAX to Lincoln, Nebraska). But that’s by the by, it’s the idea that counts. For Carl, saying yes indiscriminately unlocks doors he hadn’t even noticed before. He even gets a promotion. Surely a government job can’t be far behind.

A restless personality at odds with himself: this is prime Carrey territory, and he throws himself into it with the zeal that is his trademark. Yes Man often feels like an unofficial follow-up to Liar, Liar, where he played a lawyer cursed to speak nothing but the truth. Does he repeat himself? Well, what comedy star doesn’t? Personal growth is like an addiction to Carl, something painful and euphoric, and he gives himself over to it completely. Of course, this could be a radically different story according to the nature of the propositions that come his way. It’s probably just as well he steers clear of the dark side of town (though he can’t avoid the advances of his sexagenarian neighbour, Fionnula Flanagan).

One of the most consistently fresh and engaging actresses around, Zooey Deschanel proves a surprisingly good match for Carrey. They seem so relaxed and fun together, it’s easy to overlook the wide (18-year) age gap between them. As befits someone called Zooey, she doesn’t stress the character’s eccentricity, but plays through it, making her quirks seem natural and free.

The movie goes the extra mile on the supporting cast too, with good work from Rhys Darby (Flight Of The Conchords) as Carl’s nerdy boss Norm and Bradley Cooper as his best friend. There’s even a bonus Luis Guzman scene thrown in.

For director Peyton Reed this is a safer, more formulaic rom-com than his previous Down with Love and The Break Up, but it’s also likely to be more successful. It’s hard to resist all that positivity on screen, even if you do wish they had pushed things a little harder here and there. It would be going too far to describe Yes Man as an offer you can’t refuse, but this is such a genial crowd-pleaser, it’s a definite maybe.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 3 
	  stars out of 5 Nigel Floyd, Time Out

Jim Carreys two-faced screen image is frustratingly inconsistent. His serious films (The Cable Guy, The... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 0 starsRead the book

A customer from Wolverhampton , 20/12/2008

dont watch the film, read the book it will be a million times better than anything carrey does.

  198 out of 205 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 0 starsRead the book, don't bother with the film.

A customer from St. Leonards-on-Sea , 22/12/2008

Why have they taken a brilliantly funny book and made it into a Jim Carry film?? Why, why, WHY?

The genius of the book is that it's true, he decides to say yes to EVERYTHING, up to and including; telling his ex girlfriend that he minds her seeing someone else and then going on their first date, he goes to a leather bar and becomes very worried about what men might ask him to do and he tries to give his phone number to the Busted loving population of Germany. Who needs over-paid, over-rated writers when this story already exists? And then they made Jim Carry the lead. Why would anyone do this?

I'm thinking of making my own version that actually has some basis in the book, with my friends, most of whom have no acting or film experience, and shooting it on my phone. This version will pee all over the Jim Carry version from a great height. If you are too impatient to wait for my film, read the book, it is very, very funny and avoid the film that exists at all costs.

  62 out of 66 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsTremendous fun

A customer from Coventry , 20/12/2008

I saw a preview of Yes Man at my local cinema today and would urge people who cannot abide Jim Carrey to go and see it , as it is a feelgood riot .Those familiar with the Danny Wallace book of a few years back will know the gist , guy is approaching middle age and his relationship goes up the spout leaving him with no social life or va va voom as the french might say , until he visits a motivational speaker who says that saying yes to everything will change his life for the better , which it does (eventually) .Cue lessons in Korean , flying a plane , oral sex from a pensioner (dont ask) ,giving a tramp a lift and much more with truly laugh out loud moments .If you need cheering up at these often worrying times for most people you could do alot worse that see this movie .Ok , the story is as thin as posh spice , but the hilarious and energetic performances from Carrey and the wonderful Rhys Darby as his geeky kiwi boss more than make up for this.I was not expecting much before , this movie but I was pleasently surprised

  30 out of 30 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsSo funny

A customer from London , 23/12/2008

This is by far one of the funniest films i have ever seen.

The whole audience was in fits of laughter the whole way through the movie and i reccommend this to anyone who loves laughing and loves a good film with a great story line.

Go and see Yes Man!

  15 out of 15 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsYes man

A customer from Bath , 24/12/2008

Obviously the book is better than the film, it always is but this movie is very funny. The audience laughed the whole way through. It is true Jim C classic so if you dont like him you may disagree with me but it is worth a watch!!! Light at heart and full of laughs!

  11 out of 11 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 0 starsYes Man

A customer from Wigan , 22/04/2009

A couple of funny bits i would say it was a one watch not much of a story line dragged on.

  3 out of 4 people found this review helpful

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