13.6.14

One Way to Die at the Movie Theater: A Million Ways to Die in the West Review

NO SPOILERS!!!!!!!
What do you get when you take a terrible Adam Sandler movie, send it to a liberal arts university (not a state school) in the north east, and then send it back in time? A Million Ways to Die in the West.

Seth MacFarlane is back again with another extremely long episode of American Guy/Family Dad. This time he pulls a Tyler Perry and writes, directs, and acts in A Million Ways to Die in the West (The West, because I'm lazy); alongside Charlize Theron and the end all be all, Liam Neeson's.
Two years ago he released Ted in his directorial debut, which surprisingly turned an iconic toy into a foul-mouthed smash hit. Ted kicked ass in the box-office, was written extremely well, AND it was actually a good movie from all aspects (directing, plot, character development, punchlines, anecdotes, drama); well, if you could get passed the talking bear.
Like Ted, A Million Ways to Die in the West was written extremely well, but where Ted succeeded in story telling, character development, casting, and everything else West of the Louisiana Purchase, The West failed horribly and for multiple reasons.
For starters, it was a victim of its long, convoluted, and egregiously specific title. A title that literally shot itself in the foot, aiming for a toenail.
Have you ever seen that show 1000 Ways to Die? You know, the show that explicitly detailed the way you can die by sitting on an aerosol can? Well, the allure behind that show, TV show mind you, was to display 1000 ways that you could die outside of common deaths: car accidents, cancers, cardiac complications, another c word that I forgot.

So, approaching The West, OH! CRACK COCAINE that's the other c word, I expected to actually view the million ways to die in the West that I've never heard of before. Okay okay, maybe not actually ALL of the million but a hefty amount.

So why in the wild wild west did I only see ten?!?! Was the movie called, 10 ways to die in the West....um no, so por que la pelĂ­cula llamada...oh sorry I speak Spanish after terrible movies, why is the movie called A Million Ways to Die in the West?!?!
As a matter of fact, this movie showed you a million ways to do something else: look hapless into the death stare of love only coming to the realization that your sought driven pilgrimage was a farce, and the object of your deferment should have been your affection the whole time. Yeah, quasi-Forgetting Sarah Marshall/Nick & Norah formula.
Unlike my motives for watching Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist, I didn't freaking go to a Seth MacFarlane movie which advertises COMEDY COMEDY COMEDY, oh and raunchy, shocking comedy, to watch a break-up romantic comedy with a recycled formulaic plot (by the way, the writing in those two movies...phenomenal **Jim Rome voice**).
Another thing that really grinds my gears about this movie is that it did not have a casting director. Stan Smith basically called up his buddies and solicited their services for his movie: the Batman's/Obi-Wan Kenobi's/Perseus's mentor, the porcelain skinned South African beauty, the Mouth filthier than the Nazi's morality during WWII, Doogie Howser, "Grandmother, what big eyes you have?", and the creep from his last feature film; at least that's what it felt like, because I couldn't have selected a group of people worse for the parts in the film.
Not saying that the group of actors and actresses are not talented in their own right (because they really are), but give me a list of people who you could NOT imagine acting in a Western comedy, and I bet Seth MacFarlane, Liam Neeson, Charlize Theron, Giovanni Ribisi, Sarah Silverman, Amanda Seyfried, and Barney Stinson make your list 99% of all the time.
All of them just felt out of place, from Sarah Silverman's raspy voice to Liam Neeson's native tongue (he's from Ireland...outlaw in Arizona? I think not).

Hell, even Charlize Theron's gorgeous face and Seth MacFarlane's supreme awareness as a sheep herder (associated with a lower status in the movie) felt wrong.
Just like this photo and what it implies
Neil Patrick Harris, playing a pompous douche-bag-starter-kit-with-instructions, was overly pretentious for a westerner and was seemingly tabbed solely for the dance number (it wouldn't be a MacFarlane production without one). The only people that sort of fit their parts in the West were the two people who disappeared from the movie for quite a while, Amanda Seyfried and Giovanni Ribisi.
Aside from the bogus title (which the main character says in the movie), the weak wack wopsided plot, and the casting, or lack thereof, the movie STILL sucked. Did I like it? Of course I did; I've honestly seen every episode of Family Guy, even the episodes in season 17.
The movie's jokes were smaht **Boston accent** ("smart" for the Harvard students) with depth that took shots at society's flaws, even modern day society's flaws.
The jokemaker and jokesayer, Seth MacFarlane, suffered from his own handsome-clean cut-racially ambiguous look, along with the fact that his fleshy self does not have an established character analysis or typecast.

Since Family Guy has characters that have been developed over a span of 12 seasons, jokes are associated with the specific character personas.

For simplicity, you could not imagine Peter Griffin making a coherent quip about politics; this type of joke is generally associated with Brian Griffin.
So with Seth MacFarlane not previously establishing his character in The West (by not acting in other movies), we get a guy basically doing "stand-up" in a movie (see Martin Lawrence), especially since he baited his jokes.

If he had starred in a couple of movies (as well as avoided hosting award's shows smh) prior to this, then maybe the general public would have gotten used to seeing his face in movies; perhaps then, his joke delivery would have probably been more readily accepted on the silver screen.
Baiting jokes? What do I mean by this? I mean just look above and notice the 14 different cranial/facial gestures he's doing with just four words (he's classically influenced and is a great orator, so I don't blame him).

Moreover, delivering jokes in front of a microphone and from behind an animated character in a TV show, gives you free reign on looking, acting, and even being however you want. If Seth MacFarlane picks his nose right before he delivers a punchline as Dr. Hartman then we wouldn't even notice. 

If you always tilt your head sideways prior to telling a joke, then the joke won't have the same surprise effect then it normally would if you didn't bait the joke by just saying it bluntly, especially if you're doing shock-comedy.
I mean look how natural Theron looks versus how wide Stewie's mouth is (normally this is called "overacting")
So, my question is...why didn't he just adapt this into a Family Guy episode? I can totes see this in a "Road to...the Wild West" episode with Stewie and Brian.
Stewie Griffin as Neil Patrick Harris...too easy
I'll tell you why, in the words of the Big Three of the 1970's...no not Walt Frazier, Earl Monroe, and Willis Reed you basketball crazed vermin, but the O'Jay's "For The Love of Money".
Just a small town girl, living in a lonely world :-(
It's been two weeks since its release and The West has already made it's money back, and then some (50 million on a 40 million dollar budget).

So, mission accomplished for Seth MacFarlane, who directed the hell out of another movie, and managed to bring in some money for his long awaited Family Guy movie; you know, the one he's been working on for three years now, the one with Brian, Stewie, and Peter; ah, I'm looking forward to seeing it.
Seriously though, this is a Redbox only type of movie; honestly, wait until you get the free code via text to rent it. I would only go to the movies and see it if someone buys your ticket.

I liked the movie a lot for its ambition and laughed out loud proudly at the jokes, but the jokes were not constant enough to keep you entertained throughout a TWO HOUR ROMANTIC COMEDY WESTERN that you've probably already have seen before.
I mean, you've literally seen this movie before
When the jokes aren't rolling back to back (a nice portion of them are seen in the trailer btw) AND the movie's harlequin baits his jokes, the punchline leaves little room for surprises; this allows you to notice flaws in the movie that you normally wouldn't have noticed if the jokes were non-stop.
Non-Stop just released on Blu-Ray/DVD/VHS/Google Play/Amazon Instant/iTunes June 10, 2014
Seth MacFarlane is a likable, funny guy who writes great jokes; I just think that Michael Cera (shown above Hannibal), Matt Damon, or even Mark Wahlberg would have crushed the lead role in this movie, since they have already established their likable, funny guy characters in other movies.
Get tha fuhk atta heah!
Since it will actually make you laugh, it was directed well, and it is making a lot of money in the box office, I will say that the movie is successful and Seth MacFarlane did a good job with what he sought out to do.

Unfortunately, because I had to wait in anticipation for the next joke, sifting longingly through dull plot points and holes, I can not give this movie a thumbs up; when the funny moments came, I came, but in my opinion there should never be a dull moment in a comedy...a summer comedy at that.
This obviously is his "go-to" move
Going into the movie knowing it's flaws will help you enjoy it, but with Neighbors already out and 22 Jump Street coming out today. I would use that 10 bucks on something more guaranteed, especially if Family Guy or American Dad isn't your cup of tea.
Watch 22 Jump Street out in theaters today 6/13/14...narc
Ultimately, this movie gets a big fat D...no not a penis, but the thing that "get's you degrees". For it's episodic like feel; concealment of the break-up rom-com story line in title and trailer; cheap cameos (Doc from Back to the Future, and Django from Django Unchained); infrequent witticism's to focus on a predictably bloated plot; talented yet poor choice in casting; and drawn out run time, the movie deserves the D, despite the great directing and intelligent, didactic jokes; I died twice: laughing when available, and watching...
That's me...on the ground...I have a glandular problem
The finished product is a cash cowboy that has a lot of nothing and some bright moments, only falling short to the creator's predecessor and ultimately suffering from the creator writing his self into a quagmire without a giggity to save it's life from a crash landing, alright!

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