My Boss's Daughter
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 29 August 2003
Dogg'd
Here's
an idea, courtesy of Ben Affleck: high profile artists involved in
waste-of-time movies should, on their releases, perform public acts
of contrition. See how well it worked for Ben: even following the
supposed strip club incident and the supposed wedding's supposed
endangerment, he did the good-sport (and dedicated executive
producer) thing, and went round to plug the new Project Greenlight
film by making fun of Gigli and his recent overexposure. A
clever gambit: even viewers who swore they couldn't take another
half-second of Bennifer news found themselves hating him just a
little less.
Call
it inverse promotion. Rather than sending Ashton Kutcher round to
the talk shows last week, before My Boss's Daughter hit
theaters, send him out the week after it opens, so that he can admit
to its terribleness, look cute and/or witty doing it, and salvage
some of his dignity. (We'll stipulate that costar Tara Reid -- whose
most recent projects were looking lost in Van Wilder and
breaking poor Carson Daly's heart, at least according to his friends
-- has none to salvage at this point.)
Kutcher
might even manage this ploy. For one thing, he's quite boyishly
charming and even articulate on the talk show couch, and seems able
to talk around this movie as well as anyone who's had a lot more
practice with such a maneuver. For another, he might not even
remember My Boss's Daughter, which has been shelved for two
years by someone looking out for him, whether intentionally or not
(that he's listed as executive producer doesn't speak well of his
choice in career-furthering projects). But now that Ashton's a hot
ticket, what with the punk'ng and the Demi Dating, any impulse to
look out for him is over. Bring on the vile humor and mindless
embarrassment.
To
say that this film, written by David Dorfman (also responsible for
the dismal comedy Anger Management), has a plot would
overstate the case. It's more like a disjointed series of mishaps
and gross-outs, Jackass piled on top of Down To Me.
Kutcher plays Tom, repeatedly described as the "nicest guy in
the world," also known as the fellow everyone walks all over.
Tom works at a publishing house run by the deeply tanned Jack
(Terence Stamp), and has a crush on the boss's deeply tanned
daughter Lisa (Reid). Tom is pasty white, which means nothing except
that he looks like he's from a planet different from that inhabited
by the rich folks.
Still,
Tom doesn't take much notice of the ostensible class distinction,
mainly because he takes little notice of everything. He believes he
can get a promotion to the creative department, and that he can win
Lisa's heart, or whatever it is she has beating in her tanned chest,
if only he can spend some quality time with her. He's so adorably
clueless that when she asks him to housesit for her so she can go to
a party with her beau Hans (Kenan Thompson), reportedly the type of
fellow her dad prefers (business-minded, nerdy, and -- go figure --
black), Tom believes she's asking him for a date. "Oh thanks,
I'll love you forever!" she squeals as he grins, thinking he's
scored.
Hijinks
begin in earnest once Jack leaves Tom in charge of his home and his
owl (named O.J., not after the murderer, as Tom surmises, but the
football player, as Jack insists). Tom proceeds to lose track of the
bird, engage with assorted troublemakers, including Jack's estranged
drug-dealing son Red (Andy Richter, wholly out of control in this
universe) and his drug-dealing associate T.J. (Michael Madsen),
Jack's just-fired secretary Audrey (Molly Shannon) and her
beer-guzzling buddies, Speed (David Koechner), Darryl (Ron Selmour),
and Tina (Carmen Electra, reprising her slo-mo wet t-shirt bit from Scary
Movie).
Tom's
encounters with each of these morons seem geared to make him more
sympathetic -- by the time T.J. decides to dominate the room by
literally peeing all over it, and Tom, the film's bad behavior
quotient is pretty much filled. Still, there's more: a male neighbor
(Joseph Patrick Cranshaw) offers to sell Tom a piece of a white
human ear in a baggie, insisting that it's Evander Holyfield's, and
only "changed color" since it's been detached (suffice it
to say that the movie's race politics are exceedingly strange); and
a girl neighbor (Ever Carradine), spends some genuinely unpleasant
screen time detailing for Tom her melancholy since her
"accident," all the while bouncing off walls and leaving
globs of blood from her badly bandaged head wound on the furniture.
You
can say this for Tom: he's dogged, in all senses. Even as he fumbles
his way through these sundry encounters, he keeps his eyes on the
seeming prize, a few moments with Lisa. Just how he has come to this
evaluation is unclear, as she only seems selfish and whiny whenever
she's on screen -- particularly strange is her decision to treat him
to a striptease and lap dance because she believes him to be
"gay." When he assures her that he's not, she's horrified
and angry for about eighteen seconds, then declares he's okay even
if he is straight.
The
case might be made that Kutcher is here perfecting his anti-leading
man status, that affable stoner sort he plays in Dude, Where's My
Car and That '70s Show. He actually appears sharp in
interviews; during his good-sport late night tour to pitch My
Boss's Daughter, he's said precious little about the film,
focusing instead on how terrific it is to be him these days, that
is, two years after he finished making it. Avoidance isn't a bad
strategy, but it's not so striking as Ben's mea culpa approach.
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Directed
by:
David Zucker
Starring:
Ashton Kutcher
Tara Reid
Terence Stamp
Molly Shannon
Michael Madsen
Andy Richter
Carmen Electra
Kenan Thompson
Written
by:
David Dorfman
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate for
children under 13.
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