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<i>Get Smart</i> a Truly Hilarious Spy-Spoof Update

Get Smart a Truly Hilarious Spy-Spoof Update

Stephen McGarvey

Crosswalk.com Executive Editor

DVD Release Date:  November 4, 2008
Theatrical Release Date:  June 20, 2008
Rating:  PG-13 (for some rude humor, action violence and language)
Genre:  Comedy, Thriller, Adaptation
Run Time:  1 hr. 50 min.
Director:  Peter Segal
Actors:  Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Terence Stamp, Alan Arkin

Hollywood loves its nostalgia, as does apparently much of America’s film-going audience. It seems like a vast number of movies made in recent years are remakes and sequels rather than new ideas. More often than not, these remakes leave us wishing the "remakers" hadn't bothered.

Television from the 1970s provides great fodder for comedic-minded screenwriters. The latest effort, Get Smart, is based on a popular spy spoof television show that pitted the bumbling secret agent Maxwell Smart of CONTROL, against the criminal organization KAOS. The show’s shtick? Max blundered through the motions of secret agent work as a self-assured moron, and managed to thwart the evil plans of KAOS week after week!—more from the help of those around him than his own efforts.

Surprisingly, the filmmakers set themselves apart from the typical 1970s “television to film” retread by creating a truly hilarious film, one that updates the spy spoof without the typical comedic contempt. Get Smart is the near perfect blend of physical comedy, goofy jokes, and witty repartee.

In our updated Get Smart, Maxwell Smart (Steve Carell), is an earnest analyst for the super secret U.S. government spy agency. Max desperately wants to be a field agent, but his boss “The Chief” (Alan Arkin) needs his skills at headquarters and says no. When terrorist organization KAOS infiltrates CONTROL, compromising the secret identity of all CONTROL agents, analyst Max gets his break. He is partnered with the beautiful and competent “Agent 99” (Anne Hathaway), whose identity is still safe due to recent plastic surgery. The two are sent traipsing across Russia to locate KAOS stockpiles of nuclear weapons.

At this point the thin plot of the film becomes irrelevant, as we see Max and 99 in and out of ridiculous setups. Fortunately the writing is funny enough that we don’t really care.  Get Smart has a goofy slapstick tone, which never quite becomes overbearing or absurd like many films of this genre.

Much of the film’s successful tenor is due to the great talent of lead Steve Carell. He’s delightfully funny as the slightly befuddled yet competent Max, and avoids the snarky arrogance that original Max, Don Adams, brought to the role. It makes up for Anne Hathaway’s slightly awkward portrayal of Agent 99. The two are hilarious as action buddies, but there is certainly a lack of chemistry between them in the romance department. Wrestler-turned-actor Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson shows his brilliant comedic timing as the “rock star” Agent 23 and former love interest of Agent 99. It’s a shame he doesn’t get more screen time as the sidelined super agent now dealing with surly officemates and jammed copy machines. Alan Arkin brings nothing new to his performance as “The Chief,” but is rewarded with some of the film’s funniest lines.

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Most Recent User Comments
esclavodecristo
9/28/2008 5:18 PM
I agree with Crabs' comment. I have not seen this movie but I long for the day when we Christians will use our strength in numbers for influence society for the good. We are many and we can do it if we are truly dedicated.

God is good! Praise Him!
grace_bink
7/8/2008 2:28 PM
I'll be honest, I don't remember the scene of Agent 99 in underwear... unless you are referring to her in the hotel with the robe, in which cas,e if you blink, you miss it, and you can't really see anything due to the robe being "flowy". I was more put-off by the blatant displays and inuendos of homosexuality. It was uncomfortable, to be sure.

There was actually one more gay joke that the reviewer did not mention, which was Max saying that a man in the bathroom was "hot" (talking about being recently exposed to radiation, but the way 99 reacted to the comment turned it into a gay joke. Certainly as far as spy movies go (spoof or not) this was on the innocent end of the spectrum as far as nudity or actual sex (not implied or assumed, but a real "sex scene"). Bond, Austin Powers, and even Naked Gun have scenes that would induce blushing, but this movie had no more than a kiss between the romantic heroes. It's a step up from the other spy movies, but not morally outstanding.
abbreviated
6/30/2008 11:23 PM
It was a tad boring in spots.

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