By Kit Bowen
Story
Tim Dingman (
Ben Stiller) and Nick Vanderpark (
Jack Black) have been best friends, neighbors and co-workers for many years and while the stable Tim tries his best, he can't convince the dreamer Nick to give up his hare-brained, get-rich-quick schemes. Good thing because one of Nick's ideas--a spray called Vapoorizer that literally makes dog poop, and other kinds of excrement, disappear--actually succeeds, making Nick, like,
crazy rich. Of course, Tim had an opportunity to go in on the deal at inception but pooh-poohed (pun intended) the whole thing. D'oh! Tim seethes with envy as he watches his friend's wealth grow to outrageous proportions--and is fueled even further by a wildcard--an oddball drifter (
Christopher Walken) Tim meets in a bar, who imposes himself in the situation. Soon Tim's life (and the script) is careening wildly out of control, and he has to make peace with his friend--and himself--before he can get it back on track.
Acting
There's always a risk when you combine two comic talents in the same movie--and unfortunately the
Stiller/
Black pairing doesn't make the cut. Granted,
Stiller has proven that he is good as a duo, but usually only with
Owen Wilson (
Zoolander,
Starsky & Hutch) or a bevy of leading ladies including
Cameron Diaz (
There's Something About Mary) and
Jennifer Aniston (
Along Came Polly), while
Black seems to be best when left to his own devices, either as the supporting player (
High Fidelity,
Orange County) or leading man (
School of Rock). The actors never really get to work their particular brand of magic, with
Black mostly suppressing his wildly eccentric ways and
Stiller nauseatingly overextending his manic ones.
Envy's supporting cast fare a bit better, including the always weird
Walken as the wacky drifter J-Man, as well as
Rachel Weisz (
Runaway Jury), stretching her comic wings, and
Saturday Night Live's
Amy Poehler, as Tim's wife and Nick's wife, respectively.
Direction
Whenever a film has been sitting on the shelf for over two years, it usually spells trouble. Based on a pitch by
Curb Your Enthusiasm's
Larry David (imagine
that development meeting), newcomer Steve Adam's script initially hits the right notes--and under the guidance of director
Barry Levinson, the premise is cleverly set up. The film even has a fair share of laugh-out-loud moments, including Nick's detailed observation that his hand is a "freakish sidekick"; J-Man's effort to get Tim to open up: "Let it tumble out like circus freaks"; Tim's only funny meltdown, "I'm just a little man who doesn't like flan"; and the ever-present question on everyone's mind, "Where does the poo go?" There is even a hilarious narrative song running throughout the film á la
There's Something About Mary. But once the envious feelings reaches a fever pitch, that quirkiness goes out the door. You want the ca-ca to hit the fan, you expect it to, but alas, that is not the case. The film ends with a flush, leaving a tidy bowl and you wondering why you sat through this crap.