Post by StevePulaski on Mar 23, 2014 17:31:05 GMT -5
Cheaper by the Dozen 2 (2005)
Directed by: Adam Shankman
Directed by: Adam Shankman
The Baker family in Cheaper by the Dozen 2.
Rating: ★
There is an annoyingly basic quality to Cheaper by the Dozen 2; one that prevents even the slightest bit of subtlety and low-key drama to occur. The film is a sequel to the 2003 remake of the 1950's film, and explaining this kind of convolution takes more than this film deserves.
We reacquaint with the Baker clan, lead by the patriarch Tom (Steve Martin) and his wife Kate (Bonnie Hunt) as they still try and raise their twelve children, all of whom are beginning to mature in some way. Dating, the quest for individuality, and personal freedom all become things the Baker children want but are at odds with their domineering father, who stands in their way of achieving them.
Noticing the family is divided and uninterested in the things they once were, Tom effortlessly sets up a vacation at the family's lake house in Lake Winnetka, which will serve as their last vacation for quite sometime seeing as how Nora Baker (Piper Perabo) is due for a baby any day now and will certainly be preoccupied. Their plan for a quiet get-together is unfortunately interrupted by the likes of Jimmy Murtaugh (Eugene Levy), Tom's old rival from yesteryear and his clan of children as well.
Things will of course take the competitive route as Tom challenges Jimmy to a family battle for the annual Labor Day family cup, where both families will compete in a series of perfunctory challenges in order to be crowned the Lake Winnetka's fortieth winner of the cup.
The film is a cheap, consistently unfunny drudge through the "maximum antics, minimum laughter" sector of comedy, where situational, sitcom humor and physical gags take the place of actual verbal wit. One could hope for some geniality and warmness in the script, but after hearing the plot, where is the warmth in watching two overbearing fathers use their children as military-men in a competition at a lake house and completely disregard their children's own personal feelings? In a film where one of the morals seems to be an active pursuit of adulthood and maturity there are sure a lot of people acting like prepubescent adolescents here.
One would optimistically assume that the presence of Eugene Levy will level things out to a moderately acceptable level, but even Levy drastically underplays his role as an overbearing family-man. If one is even vaguely acquainted with Levy's career as an actor, they know he could've played this role way over the top, to unforeseeable comedic heights, emphasizing all his character's own personal flaws while making us laugh at him at the same time.
Instead, Levy shrinks to the level of conventionality and interchangeability here, which is something I never thought I'd say about a unique actor, both in appearance and in acting craft. Put alongside Steve Martin, another actor of impeccable deadpanning craft and charm, both men seem to have all the life sucked out of them and only enough to call for a bottom-barrel film where the presence of a laugh seems to be next to non-existent.
When Cheaper by the Dozen 2 isn't focusing on tired physical gags or nauseating sex puns, it holds a strong focus on its character Alyson Stoner of the Baker family, who develops a crush on Taylor Lautner's character of the Murtaugh family. She seeks lessons from her older sister Lorraine (Hillary Duff) in a scene that would've worked beautiful had the film had more time to develop it. There's a serious thesis about growing up, dating, and maturing in Cheaper By the Dozen 2, but too bad it's hampered by elements that do nothing but cheapen potentially ripe material.
Starring: Steve Martin, Bonnie Hunt, Eugene Levy, Hillary Duff, Piper Perabo, Alyson Stoner, Tom Welling, Carmen Electra, Jaime King, and Taylor Lautner. Directed by: Adam Shankman.