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View Full Version : The Heat (Paul Fieg)



Rowland
06-29-2013, 09:47 PM
IMDb (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2404463/)

http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn52/drowland811/the-heat-mondo-poster_zpsf8cc351a.jpg

Rowland
06-29-2013, 09:50 PM
Funnier than the lame trailers and the overexposure of McCarthy led me to expect.

Watashi
06-29-2013, 11:25 PM
The trailer for this was absolutely horrible.

EyesWideOpen
06-30-2013, 01:00 AM
Fieg, heh. Smooth move Ferguson.

transmogrifier
06-30-2013, 01:37 AM
Funnier than the lame trailers and the overexposure of McCarthy led me to expect.

Hypothetically, what would stop you from watching a particular movie?

Mal
06-30-2013, 02:01 AM
It's terrible- doesn't aspire to be anything other than mediocre and doesn't contain a single genuine moment unless you think Spanx and albino jokes are biting. I think with a re-write or two this could have been somewhat passable since the casting of McCarthy... is expected but undeniably fitting for her character, though Fieg's direction is as bland as the genre so we're left with nothing but stale material we've all seen before. Sandra Bullock is clearly too rich to care about what she's starring in.

plain
07-02-2013, 05:34 AM
There's just enough here not to play pile on; but first off, Bridesmaids this is not. McCarthy's character is built on the same old walking-talking man child routine, a character spewing obscenities and fumbling around while Bullock does her "thing" and plays it cool. Me thinks Kristen Wiig would've nailed this -- not that Bullock and McCarthy don't gel, but it's all too destined to play a certain way. After a while, this is really all over the place; broad, vulgar, and partially disposable.

Rowland
07-02-2013, 06:31 AM
Hypothetically, what would stop you from watching a particular movie?I wanted to see The Bling Ring, my girlfriend wanted to see this; we had just seen White House Down the night before, so I felt that I owed her. This was getting some okay reviews from people I follow on Letterboxd, so even though I went in with a bit of a chip on my shoulder, I figured I'd make the best of it, and wound up being surprised by solid it is. And with that, I'm off to watch The Last Exorcism! Part Deux.

transmogrifier
07-02-2013, 07:40 AM
I wanted to see The Bling Ring, my girlfriend wanted to see this; we had just seen White House Down the night before, so I felt that I owed her. This was getting some okay reviews from people I follow on Letterboxd, so even though I went in with a bit of a chip on my shoulder, I figured I'd make the best of it, and wound up being surprised by solid it is. And with that, I'm off to watch The Last Exorcism! Part Deux.

You didn't answer my question.

My working theory: nothing. There is nothing that would stop you. You are a remorseless movie watching machine will will not stop until all the movies have been watched.

eternity
07-04-2013, 01:14 AM
It's funny, though it further cements my feeling that Sandra Bullock sucks the energy out of any movie she's in.

Morris Schæffer
07-04-2013, 05:28 AM
Just remember folks, if you don't like this movie, you can always pretend it's simply a fieg-ment of your imagination!

EyesWideOpen
07-12-2013, 02:18 AM
This was mildly ok. A hell of a lot better then Identity Thief that's for sure.

Lazlo
07-16-2013, 01:43 PM
I loved this movie's disdain for dogs.

Fezzik
07-22-2013, 01:09 PM
I loved this movie's disdain for dogs.

Even as a dog lover, I found Bullock's dressing down of the drug dog (not once, but twice) very funny.

This was surprisingly...not horrible. I was kinda dragged to it by a friend who kept insisting I see it (she wanted to see it again). Luckily, I didn't have to pay for it (yay Moviepass!) so why not?

By the numbers, predictable and lazy at points? Sure. Most of the stuff with McCarthy's family annoyed the hell out of me. But I laughed more than a few times (a hell of a lot more than I did watching Bridesmaids).

My favorite moments were the matter-of-fact line readings that ended some of the exchanges:

Bullock's "What is this, Training Day?" during the scene in the Bulgarian's apartment

McCarthy's "Go get your top hat" at the end of the scene where she thinks Bullock's pajamas are a pant suit

etc

I admit the humor became a little uncomfortable after the movie suddenly took a very dark turn -

Bullock's car exploding

- but at points, that actually made it even funnier. McCarthy explaining her brother's resume while tearing up was quite humorous.

A yay from me, and I'm as surprised as anyone.

Lazlo
07-22-2013, 04:36 PM
Even as a dog lover, I found Bullock's dressing down of the drug dog (not once, but twice) very funny.

Yeah, fantastic. I love dogs too, and the idea that this dude was just terrible at his job when it's usually a given that the dog is gonna find the drugs was inspired. The giant dog in the scene with McCarthy's family cramming into that one van was great too.

amberlita
07-22-2013, 11:24 PM
My favorite moments were the matter-of-fact line readings that ended some of the exchanges


My friend texted me earlier to tell me is still laughing at McCarthy calling Bullock's boss "Puss in boots".

This was okay. I laughed, but I have a sneaky suspicion that most of the funniest bits and lines were due to improvisation or delivery by McCarthy. Which means this movie isn't funny. McCarthy is funny.

There was also more gore than I was expecting.

Fezzik
07-23-2013, 12:17 AM
My friend texted me earlier to tell me is still laughing at McCarthy calling Bullock's boss "Puss in boots".


That was so out of left field that it took me a second to understand why she called him that, then I started laughing.

I agree a lot of this succeeded because of McCarthy. Her comic delivery and timing is pretty fantastic, and apparently her ability to improv is pretty damn good too.

Peng
04-03-2021, 03:55 PM
Have Bridesmaids and Last Christmas left for Paul Feig's unwatched films last decade, but I'm surprised to find the rest having roughly the same running time, as this feels punishingly longer than the others. Maybe because this is not as high concept/plot-based or an ensemble as those, so no amount of loose buddy cop comedy throwback can fill that much time. Bullock and McCarthy are an appealing duo and have chemistry enough to almost halfway salvage this though. 5/10