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Cop Out
2/26/2010 05:00 am
Stars: 3.0

If you were to combine the sensibilities of an Eighties buddy cop comedy with the Nineties dirty joke sensibilities of a Kevin Smith film, you'd get Cop Out. While this mash-up doesn't produce results on par with the best of the genres it draws on, it still provides plenty of laughs. Jimmy Monroe (Bruce Willis) and Paul Hodges (Tracy Morgan) are two veteran NYPD officers who can't make it ten minutes into the film without getting suspended for a bust gone bad. This turn of events is particularly bad for Monroe, who was counting on a steady paycheck to bankroll his daugher's (Michelle Trachtenburg) wedding and show up her smarmy stepfather (Jason Lee). When his efforts to raise the money by selling a treasured baseball card are thwarted by a thief (Seann William Scott), his efforts to get the card back draw him and his partner even deeper into the investigation that got them suspended in the first place. It's all servicable fodder for a buddy cop flick, and Willis and Morgan are game, bouncing banter off each other with aplomb. That the banter isn't written by the film's director, Kevin Smith, is regrettable, as the script, by Robb and Mark Cullen, doesn't give the duo dialogue nearly as clever as Smith is known for. Which is not to say they don't get off a few zingers, or that the film doesn't supply some truly outrageous moments. A run in with a car thief provides one of the film's best gags, the kind where the audience drowns out the next two minutes of dialogue because it's laughing so hard. It almost doesn't matter that Smith directs the film. Without his signature dialogue, he can't leave much of a personal stamp on the film. It's clear that he has films like Fletch and Running Scared on his mind, but Cop Out feels far more generic than its inspirations. The film's biggest shout-out to the Eighties comes in the form of a score by Harold Faltermeyer (Fletch, Beverly Hills Cop). Unfortunately, the score comes off sounding like an attempt to emulate Faltermeyer's own synth charm instead of the real deal. The film's MVP actually ends up being Scott, who steals his scenes both with the film's leads and with others. One of the film's best moments revolves around his character hectoring a cellmate into a surprising admission. Kevin Smith fans expecting a typical Kevin Smith movie are sure to be disappointed by Cop Out. But those looking for an amiable R-rated comedy may well find themselves having a good time.
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