By Brian Marder
Story
Well, "story" might be a strong word, but it could be no other way for a movie version of the hit Comedy Central TV show. After the Reno police squad—deputies Travis Junior (
Ben Garant), Raineesha Williams (
Niecy Nash), Cherisha Kimball (
Mary Birdsong), Trudy Wiegel (
Kerri Kenney), Clementine Johnson (
Wendi McLendon-Covey), James Garcia (
Carlos Alazraqui), S. Jones (
Cedric Yarbrough), and Lt. Dangle (
Thomas Lennon)—makes a grand, if dubious, entrance, the officers receive the news that they’ve been invited to the "American Police Convention" in Miami Beach. Following the cross-country trek from Nevada to Florida—by bus, mind you—they’re immediately fish out of water in fast-paced, party-friendly Miami, but that all changes when a terrorist attack strands all local police. Suddenly, the entire metropolis falls under the jurisdiction of the eight inept officers from Reno, and that’s (supposed to be) a very funny proposition.
Acting
The whole cast from the
Reno 911 TV show is on board here and the actors are just as goofy on the big screen as they are on the small one—only now they’re more
Police Academy than
Cops spoofers. Indeed, the sly, wry humor is mostly gone, but these well-traveled actors make it work more than it should. Namely
Lennon, as the Daisy Dukes-donning lieutenant, and
Kenney, as the always-awkward Trudy. (It should be noted that she not only looks and acts like
Rachel Dratch’s twin, but the Reno Sheriff's Department would probably be a great fit for the
SNL/
30 Rock actress.) The rest of the actors simply stretch out their TV personas to movie versions, and is it ever a stretch! Very funny cameos from
Danny DeVito,
David Koechner (
Anchorman),
Patton Oswalt (TV’s
The King of Queens)—whose role is more integral than a mere cameo—and
Paul Rudd, as a hilarious Scarface-like drug lord, render the acting at least not to blame for
Reno: Miami’s woes.
Direction
The main story here is, predictably, the lack of a story. It’s fine and, in fact, expected to have a thin story line for
Reno: Miami lest stoner audiences have to think, but at least there could’ve been a mock story. Even the
Scary Movies find a better way to connect their spoof vignettes, but there’s essentially nothing going on here. And it’s
not safe to assume that viewers of the
Reno TV show will enjoy the movie, because the TV show consists of more bizarre, inane and dry humor than does the movie. That’s the problem with transferring such a show to the big screen: Everything must be fleshed out when it’s not meant to be. Writer-producer-director-star (!)
Ben Garant, who also co-wrote mega-hit
Night at the Museum with
Reno costar
Thomas Lennon, is thus the prime suspect here. When
Garant brings the humor, it’s golden and similar to that from the show, but he doesn’t allow it to pop up often, instead trying to attract a wider, younger fan base via sex gags and pratfalls—some of which fail so badly it’s embarrassing.