Fathers' Day
Some holidays have more pizzazz, box-office wise, than others. Not quite a year
after Independence Day blasted away the competition, Ivan Reitman's
Fathers' Day, a remake of the French comedy Les compères,
tries to do the same with fewer pyrotechnics. Like its predecessor, it relies
less on the story or the holiday sentiment than on the special effects: Billy
Crystal's whiplash wit and Robin Williams's manic inventiveness.
Crystal is Jack Lawrence, a cynical lawyer accosted by Colette
(Nastassja Kinski), an old flame he broke up with 17 years ago. She wants him
to track down her runaway son Scott (Charlie Hofheimer), claiming that he's his
father. She tells the same story to another former beau, would-be writer and
full-time nutcase Dale Putley, who's played with relaxed insanity by Williams.
Once the pair shake off this unlikely and smarmy set-up and set off on the
mission together, they create some mindless mirth. It might not have the impact
of the White House blowing up, but watching the two deal with imaginary road
accidents and an annoying mime almost makes up for the inevitable platitudes
about fatherhood along the way. At the Cinema World, Framingham, Gardner,
the Hoyt Dayville, the Hoyt Franklin, Leominster, Marlboro, the Maynard Fine
Arts, the Solomon Pond Hoyt 15, the Webster Square, Westboro, and the Worcester
North Showcase.
-- Peter Keough
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