Tim Allen reteams with director John Pasquin (THE SANTA CLAUSE) in JOE SOMEBODY. Allen stars as Joe Scheffer, a mild-mannered man who makes promotional videos for a Minneapolis pharmaceutical company. Joe is divorced and quietly unhappy until the office bully, Mark McKinney (Patrick Warburton), punches him out in the company .. Read more
| Starring | Kelly Lynch, Julie Bowen, James Belushi, Greg Germann |
|---|---|
| Director | John Pasquin |
| Genres | Comedy |
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Tim Allen reteams with director John Pasquin (THE SANTA CLAUSE) in JOE SOMEBODY. Allen stars as Joe Scheffer, a mild-mannered man who makes promotional videos for a Minneapolis pharmaceutical company. Joe is divorced and quietly unhappy until the office bully, Mark McKinney (Patrick Warburton), punches him out in the company parking lot in front of Joe's precocious young daughter (Hayden Panettiere of REMEMBER THE TITANS). The humiliated Joe sinks into such a deep depression that not even the flirtations of the company's pretty "wellness coordinator" (Julie Bowen) can rouse him. Joe decides to restore his pride by challenging McKinney to a fight, and suddenly finds himself the most popular man in the office. Joe even hires a washed-up action movie star (Jim Belushi in a hilariously grizzled performance) to teach him martial arts. He soon finds that he has to weigh the allure of his newfound popularity against the love and respect of those who liked him the way he was. Screenwriter John Scott Shepherd does a good job of balancing slapstick comedy with touching family drama. Allen shows surprising dramatic range, turning in a strong and sympathetic performance as an emotionally complex and dynamic character.
| Starring | Kelly Lynch, Julie Bowen, James Belushi, Greg Germann, Hayden Panettiere |
|---|---|
| Director | John Pasquin |
| Studio | 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 34 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 21 Apr 2003 Production year: 2001 |
| Format | DVD |
There's a shrewd satirical intelligence at work in this contemporary take on the conformity is contentment rationale that made Pleasantville so effective. However, Tim Allen is too eager to please as the corporate video-maker who kicks against a system that has designated him a drone. Consequently, director John Pasquin's astutely conveyed community of spirit-sapping averageness is rapidly overturned by slapstick and schmaltz, as Allen has to choose between being the conqueror of bullying workmate Patrick Warburton or a good dad. Jim Belushi contributes a slick cameo as Allen's karate teacher, but ultimately (and almost inevitably) middlebrow mediocrity wins the day.
Mild-mannered comedy of corporate life with a little romance thrown in, but it doesn't punch its weight.
Good movie only slightly dissapointed with the ending.
Tim Alan is always good to watch. This time he stars as a divorced father, and strives to save his pride after being beaten up in front of his daughter. The story gives us an insight to what children of divorced parents feels like and how it affects them. Tim Alan also teaches us that sometimes, revenge isn't the answer to everything. Quite a good film.
Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous comes to DVD today, with Sandra Bullock reprising her role as FBI agent Gracie Hart. Bullock, the star of the Speed films and 28 Days, goes undercover to rescue two beauty pageant friends who have been abducted. The sequel features Regina King, who has appeared in Ray and Legally Blonde 2, Star Trek legend William Shatner and Heather Burns, soon to feature in Bewitched. Miss Congeniality 2 is directed by John Pasquin, whose career trademark up to this... Read more