The 21st century 21 Jump Street bangs the gong — comedy style — by expertly exploiting high school and cop show cliches. Well mounted, creatively inspired and charismatically performed, it’s almost enough to give commercial crap a good name. OK, maybe not, but it’s entertaining as hell.
Hell-on-wheels is a major part of the program in a movie that is a deal-with-the-Devil high concept done up with major production values. The Big Booms do take a while to appear though, leading to a running joke.
A big bromance between Channing Tatum’s manly-man and Jonah Hill’s loser-man works very well.
Well developed and well played, it provides endless opportunities for gags, goofs and grins.
Johnny Depp’s cameo surprises even though you know it’s coming, then gets played for all it’s worth pop-culturally speaking and for the movie. I didn’t watch the TV show, not even a single episode, but loved the closure Tom Hanson’s moviestar creator delivered. A final slam-a-rino as it were.
Hollywood comedies like 21 Jump Street are nihilistic exercises that demonstrate contempt for healthy societal values. Understand that and you’re mature enough to laugh with abandon at what is undeniably an LOL fest. Many in the young-adult target audience won’t understand. God help them until they realize that the values underlying the comedy are a recipe for personal destruction.
Jonah Hill & Channing Tatum underplay their roles and are all the funnier for it. Hill in particular has mastered the movie actor’s art of letting the camera come to him, as he demonstrated in Moneyball but also makes work here on his native ground of comedy. Tatum downplays his leading man looks and highlights his character’s dim intellect, making him funny and all the more appealing.
Highlights of the strong supporting cast:
Oh yeah, then there’s a small part delivered by someone named Johnny Depp. Guy’s got a future.
Kudos to executive producers Jonah Hill & Channing Tatum for getting series creator Steven J. Cannell and series star Johnny Depp behind the project. It probably wouldn’t have worked otherwise. Instead it slays.
Loved the high school and cop show cliche touchstones:
Should high school kids watch this adult-oriented high school movie? No. It’s cultural crack, full of designer drugs, random sex and trivialized violence, all in the name of laughs. The laughs come, but the cultural damage done to impressionable minds has to be a worry.
Even worse was the fact that I heard pre-school kids in the audience at a 10PM show. WTF are their parents thinking? No wonder we’ve got social problems in this country.
Deeply surreal. Got that kids? Life ain’t like this, not if you want to live.
Regarding BrianSez’s Review
Perfect summary, Bri.
Regarding Wick’s Review
Excellent review, Wick. And hilarious quip about Depp there : )