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Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Finally, we have a great Thunderous comedy on the horizon. Went to a screening of Tropic Thunder on Monday night at the Bridge in West Philadelphia. (If you haven't been, it's the nicest place to see movies in the city, especially during the sweltering summer.)

Directed, co-written and starring Ben Stiller -- who knew he had these gifts? -- Thunder is a send-up of Hollywood, machismo, racial stereotypes, popular culture and a plain hoot. The movie, about a Vietnam action movie that goes horribly wrong, manages to astonish on many levels.

First, there's Stiller's advancement as a writer and director of the first order. (His acting is still hammy.)  Robert Downey, Jr. is terrific as a Russell Crowe-type method actor who stays in character, as a black sargeant, long after the movie cameras stop filming. Matthew McConaughey, usually pretty but wooden, is very good as a clueless agent. And an unrecognizable Tom Cruise almost steals the movie in an unbilled cameo as a crass movie producer. He should stop playing  pretty-boy heroes and only take on comedy and villains, at which he excels. (See Magnolia.) The cast includes two great one-time insurance risks in the business, Downey and Nick Nolte as Vietnam vet memoirist, and both are wonderful.

Intelligent, funny and fast, it makes you want to see it again and own a copy.

The preview audience loved it. Funny to 14-year-olds  and their parents. Opens Aug. 13. See it. Thank me later.
Posted by Karen Heller @ 11:07 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
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About Karen Heller
This week Karen Heller is live-blogging the Republican convention in true blogger style - at home, surfing the Web and watching TV. She's covered five other conventions. Three were Republican, two were Democratic. Read all of Populist here.

Karen Heller has interviewed Philip Roth and Zsa Zsa Gabor, spent time with Pink and the Philadelphia Orchestra, the celebrated and the exemplary unsung. She's covered Miss America and political conventions. She's been a provocative voice at The Inquirer for nearly 20 years, garnering awards for criticism, feature writing and investigative reporting, and was a finalist for the 2001 Pulitzer Prize in commentary.