Cedar Rapids keeps its ambitions in check and easily exceeds them. A gut-bustingly funny story about Ed Helms’ rural Cheesehead taking his first airplane trip to the Gotham of the title, it needn’t venture far from home to harvest a bumper crop of universally identifiable storylines.
Did I mention that it’s exceptionally funny? Nearly 50% LOL, plus a few more if your sense of propriety is low enough. Raunchy funny, really raunchy on several occasions. Be warned.
Think of a cross between The Hangover and The 40 Year Old Virgin. The former also stars Ed Helms, only here the roadtrip is workaday, the buddies mainstream, even if the situations end up damn near as extreme. The latter brings to mind the rich comedy to be mined by placing a preternaturally naive man in a series of salacious situations. Also like both those movies, this one slays, comedically speaking.
Featuring eight great performances, including from John C. Reilly, Isiah Whitlock Jr. and Anne Heche to go with that of Helms, Cedar Rapids has ample fire power to deliver on Phil Johnston’s brilliant screenplay and Miguel Arteta’s deft direction.
Fans of comedy and great American filmmaking will find Cedar Rapids a trip worth taking.
Current Event Note
Wisconsin – quintessentially mid-American – all of a sudden occupies the middle of my American consciousness. First Aaron Rogers quarterbacks the Packers to a Super Bowl win, then the public employee unions storm Madison while their indentured servants in the Senate hightail it to Illinois all the while claiming Democracy in Action, and now we have a brilliantly funny comedy about a Cheesehead who uses old fashioned Badger State virtue to come out on top.
On, Wisconsin! Hail thee, good, great, and hypocritical – in the case of the Union Democrats.
A killer quartet of actors anchor the movie:
Accomplished thespians surround them, four of whom jump off the screen:
All hail director Miguel Arteta and writer Phil Johnston for crafting this comedic gem. While Johnston has seemingly come out of nowhere, Arteta’s Youth in Revolt produced one of 09’s funniest trailers.
Nasty blue … hell, let’s just call it what it is: misogynisticly funny. If Anne Heche – once betrothed to Ellen DeGeneres – can go along when her fearless foursome crashes a wedding party of “rug munchers” (think “two brides”), the coast seems clear for we in the viewing audience to get in touch with our inner pig.
Travel on business? You’ll recognize much in Cedar Rapids, especially if you go to the occasional conference. The mix of business and pleasure, the cheesy surrounds, the panoply of good and bad colleagues, it’s all here. Only thing I’ve never seen is a working girl outside the hotel. Thank goodness.
Regarding Wick’s Review
Yeah, I go out less now than ever given the big screen in my family room. But it’s always fun to sit amongst an audience convulsed with laughter.
Regarding Wick’s Review
Thanks for the great review! You’ve convinced me to make the trek into the city to go se this.