The Comedy (film)
The Comedy | |
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Directed by | Rick Alverson |
Written by | Rick Alverson Robert Donne Colm O'Leary |
Produced by | Mike S. Ryan Brent Kunkle |
Starring | Tim Heidecker Eric Wareheim James Murphy Gregg Turkington Kate Lyn Sheil Alexia Rasmussen Jeff Jensen |
Cinematography | Mark Schwartzbard |
Edited by | Rick Alverson Michael Taylor |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Tribeca Film (USA) |
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Comedy is a 2012 American drama film co-written, co-edited, and directed by Rick Alverson, and starring Tim Heidecker, Eric Wareheim, James Murphy, and Gregg Turkington. The film was executive produced by David Gordon Green, Danny McBride, Jody Hill, Darius Van Arman, and Larry Fessenden. It premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival[1] and screened within such festivals as Maryland Film Festival 2012. The film was distributed by Tribeca Film and theatrically released on November 9, 2012. It went nationwide on demand starting October 24, 2012.[2] Despite the title and use of comedians as actors, Sundance festival chief programmer Trevor Groth says that the film is not a comedy, but instead "a provocation, a critique of a culture based at its core around irony and sarcasm and about ultimately how hollow that is."[3] The film was deliberately leaked onto various torrent websites, though the file only shows the first ten minutes before abruptly cutting to Heidecker sitting silently on a boat behind a scrolling anti-piracy statement.
Plot
Swanson (Heidecker) is an aging, upper class hipster who alternately feels apathy and resentment towards his surroundings. He lives on a boat and spends his time partying and wandering around Brooklyn with his equally privileged friends, humorlessly ridiculing the various people they encounter. In the beginning of the film, his father is comatose,[4] and Swanson is set to inherit his estate. He mentions having a brother who is institutionalized, though it is unclear where. The only familiar connection he has appears to be his sister-in-law (Liza Kate). The film has no clear narrative, instead showing vignettes of Swanson's offensive behavior as he improvises situations to make strangers and acquaintances uncomfortable. Swanson and his buddies (Eric Wareheim, James Murphy, Richard Swift) continuously mock their less intelligent friend Cargill (Jeff Jensen) after he confesses they are important to him. Cargill continues spending time with them regardless. Swanson flirts with a woman at a party while sarcastically praising Hitler. She's sleeping naked in Swanson's boat the next morning, and he solemnly ferries her back to land. Swanson and his friends visit a church, where they desecrate various objects and cause a scene. Swanson visits a bar in Harlem alone, flaunting his wealth and insulting the African-American patrons by suggesting he gentrify the place. At one point, Swanson pays a cab driver 400 dollars to let him drive the car, only to speed recklessly and harass a woman on the street.
Cast
- Tim Heidecker as Swanson
- Eric Wareheim as Van Harman
- Jeffrey Jensen as Cargill
- James Murphy as Ben
- Gregg Turkington as Bobby
- Kate Lyn Sheil as the waitress
- Liza Kate as Swanson's sister-in-law
- Alexia Rasmussen as the young woman
- Richard Swift as Richard
Reception
The film received mixed reviews from critics. It received an aggregate rating of 47% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 34 reviews,[5] and 46% on Metacritic based on the opinions of 15 critics (indicating "mixed or average reviews").[6] For example, David Lewis of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that the film was "one of the most self-indulgent, pretentious and unfunny movies of the year",[7] while Scott Tobias of The A.V. Club gave the film an "A−" rating, writing that "few films have better articulated the limits of irony as a force field against the world".[8] Aaron Hillis of The Village Voice called it "transgressively brilliant... an itchy critique of entitlement starring avant-garde comedian Tim Heidecker as one of Williamsburg's overprivileged". The film has drawn comparisons to both La Dolce Vita and The Idiots.[9] The film had a limited theatrical release, grossing $41,113 in four theaters over eight weeks.[10]
See also
- The Disintegration Loops, featured on the film's soundtrack.
- New Sincerity
- Criticism of postmodernism
- White privilege
- Alternative comedy
References
- ↑ "2012 Sundance Film Festival Announces Films in Competition". Sundance Institute.
- ↑ "Tim Heidecker Takes the Lead in Full Trailer for Indie 'The Comedy'".
- ↑ "Sundance Film Festival 2012 lineup". CNN.
- ↑ MUBI Movies: The Comedy (2012)|Birth.Movies.Death.
- ↑ "The Comedy". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
- ↑ "The Comedy". Metacritic. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
- ↑ "'The Comedy' movie review: Dreadful". 22 November 2012.
- ↑ Tobias, Scott. "The Comedy".
- ↑ BAM
- ↑ "The Comedy (2012) - Box Office Mojo". www.boxofficemojo.com.
External links
- No URL found. Please specify a URL here or add one to Wikidata.
- The Comedy at IMDb
- The Comedy at Rotten Tomatoes