The best comedies work when the audience can relate to what is happening on the screen. Awkward or embarrassing situations, that are believable, make us laugh the hardest. In the comedy The Sitter, these moments are few and far between. For every laugh out loud moment, there are 6 or 7 more that just don’t work.
Noah (Jonah Hill), is a loser, kicked out of school, and content to watch TV all day. When his neighbors need a babysitter, he is roped into duty, although he obviously is incapable of taking care of anyone, including himself. Now he has to watch over three challenging kids, including Blythe (Landry Bender), Slater (Max Records), and adopted brother Rodrigo (Kevin Hernandez). Blythe wears way too much makeup and seems to have learned social skills from watching Jersey Shore on MTV. Slater is struggling for acceptance and an identity. And Rodrigo is portrayed as a deeply disturbed young man, who seems to scare everyone he comes into contact with.
Noah is in love with Marissa (Ari Graynor), who just uses him. This leads to Noah and the kids getting into all sorts of increasingly unbelievable trouble, somewhat reminiscent of Adventures in Babysitting. The problem for this reviewer was that the situations and characters became too bizarre, which took away from the film and made it seem almost abstract. Shock comedy is one thing, but this stuff was too much in spots. Not to mention some of the disturbing stuff the child actors had to participate in.
In the end, Hill plays a character we’ve seen before, and everyone else portrays a caricature or stereotype. From the next-door-mom with the large chest, to the children who each have deep issues, it’s just too much.
Regarding BigdaddyDave’s Review
“Usually I complain when a film moves too slow. This time we have a film that moves way too fast, placing our characters into situations and bizarre plots too quickly.” Just so.