Rough
Night * / *****
Written
by: Lucia
Aniello & Paul W. Downs.
Starring:
Scarlett
Johansson (Jess), Jillian Bell (Alice), Zoë Kravitz (Blair), Ilana Glazer (Frankie),
Kate McKinnon (Kiwi / Pippa), Paul W. Downs (Peter), Ryan Cooper (Jay), Ty
Burrell (Pietro), Demi Moore (Lea), Enrique Murciano (Detective Ruiz), Dean
Winters (Detective Frazier), Colton Haynes (Real Scotty), Patrick Carlyle (Patrick),
Eric André (Jake), Bo Burnham (Tobey), Hasan Minhaj (Joe).
Is there anything more depressing
than a terrible movie made for and by an unrepresented group in Hollywood?
Rough Night is a raunchy, R-rated comedy co-written and directed by a woman –
Lucia Aniello – and starring five incredibly talented actresses – Scarlett Johansson,
Jillian Bell, Zoe Kravitz, Ilana Glazer and Kate McKinnon – and yet it is
pretty much a comedic dead zone. After the success of Bridesmaids, you would
have thought we would have gotten more films attempting to do what that film
did – but it seems like the only thing Hollywood learned from it was that
Melissa McCarthy is a movie star (of that, we can at least be thankful). Rough
Night should have been the long delayed payoff of movies like Bridesmaids –
instead, it’s so bad, and did so poorly at the box office, I fear that
Hollywood will go back to thinking that movies like this will never work.
The film is about the bachelorette
weekend for Jess (Johansson) thrown for her by her best friend Alice (Bell) –
who wants to relive their university glory days of drinking to excess. Along
for the weekend are two other university friends – Frankie and Blair (Glazer
and Kravitz) who apparently were lovers in school, but split up since – with Blair
becoming rich, and married to a man. Then there is Pippa (Kate McKinnon) – a crazed
eccentric with a horrible Australian accent along for the ride. Their weekend
is Miami starts with drinking, then moves to cocaine and eventually they hire a
stripper from Craigslist who show up – and is, uh, killed in a freak accident.
Fearing they’re lives will be ruined by this, they try to hide the body – and hilarity
is supposed to ensue.
Dark comedy like this is hard to
pull off – it’s not easy to mix death and humor together – but Aniello pretty much
makes the whole thing impossible by insisting on making her characters likable.
The movie has the same basic plot as Peter Berg’s Very Bad Things (1998) –
which wasn’t a very good movie, but at least had the sense to make the group of
men who accidentally kill a prostitute at a bachelor party into horrible
people. The revelations about the true identity of the stripper that comes late
in Rough Night don’t much help – it’s meant to make everything okay, but it’s
labored and forced instead. The film essentially wants to make its leads
likable, funny killers – and it just doesn’t much work.
The cast seems game for pretty
much anything – and throw themselves at every opportunity for humor imaginable.
Bell and McKinnon seem to be trying to top each other in terms of who can go
more crazily over-the-top – which you would think would be funny – since both
are usually so good at doing just that. They don’t have much to work with
though. Glazer and Kravitz fare worse because neither even tries to go for
broke, and the material about their supposed love-hate relationship never quite
comes together – you don’t get the simmering sexual tension between them you
should. In theory, Johansson should be the “straight” woman in the bunch – the calm,
rational center of the film that the film needs to ground it from all the craziness
around her. But since the craziness never really takes off, her performance
comes across more as boring than anything else.
In a perfect world, Rough Night
would be seen as what it is – a singular misfire by talented people, who simply
whiffed on one. While I have watched Broad City – I trust those who say Aniello’s
work on that show, as both writer and director – is good – and I know the rest
of the cast is great. Instead, I fear that this horrible movie will set back
female led comedies in Hollywood. That’s silly and stupid I know – men seem to
be able to fail again and again and again and have no penalty – but I also fear
it’s true.
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