CLIP 8 / «They're happy here» Though there are some funny scenes
between Carrey and Clark Gregg, who plays an overzealous zoologist, the penguin shenanigans get old very quickly.
While True Crimes begins with the upsetting imagery of women raped and abused within the confines of the sex club The Cage, it quickly becomes a tiresome battle of wills
between Carrey and Csokas, a man playing the same game as the iconic fictional sociopath Catherine Tramell of Verhoeven's Basic Instinct.
«There is a lot of interaction
between Carrey and me when we were filming the movie,» said Lawler.
Not exact matches
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Carrey takes aim at Kent State grad who posed with AR - 10 MORE.
The parallel stories allow the movie to cut back and forth
between the antics of Horton and the mayor (or more precisely,
Carrey and Carell), as each one - lines his way toward a predictable end (Whoville is saved).
Mark Waters, who directed from material based on the celebrated children's book by Richard and Florence Atwater, has a flair for goofiness that matches
Carrey's own, and there are scenes
between the birds and Mr. Popper in his sleek Manhattan duplex that are peerlessly silly.
Adaptation of the 1938 children's book, set in contemporary Manhattan: When a distant father and ruthless businessman (Jim
Carrey) inherits six penguins, he soon learns that the balance
between work, life and personal space is easier when you add a little unexpected help.
Not surprisingly,
Carrey's manic performance is the best thing about the film, where his rubber - faced talents are put to their best usage in distinguishing the difference
between the mild - mannered Charlie and completely impish Hank.
It slides from art to life — thoughtfully poking around in that blurred space
between them — and jumps around in time, all while flipping from Kaufman to Mr.
Carrey and then to Mr.
Carrey as Mr. Kaufman.
Carrey in particular, who can excel at either zany or serious if given half a chance, is left sitting uncomfortably on the fence
between the two.
The interrogation scenes
between Csokas and
Carrey are the only moments with actual tension in the movie.
Chris Smith's documentary delves deep into the philosophical implications of Jim
Carrey's erasure of the boundary
between self and character, exploring what it really means to be «the dude playing a dude disguised as another dude.»
At the film's recent press day,
Carrey and Daniels talked about reprising their roles in the sequel, how it was driven by fan demand, what it was like getting back into character and finding their chemistry again, the love
between the characters, which one is Dumb and which one is Dumber, how the characters hold a special place in their lives as they do for the fans, the return of the Mutt Cutts van and other callbacks from the original film, working with Kathleen Turner, their favorite scene, and where they see their characters in another 20 years.
Woody Harrelson and Randy Quaid do all right as a has - been bowler and an Amish schnook on their way to Reno for a million - dollar tournament, but they can't straddle the line
between the real and unreal the way Jim
Carrey and Jeff Daniels did in «Dumb and Dumber.»
Things culminate in a massive battle
between news teams that's more notable for the incredible number of celebrity cameos — Will Smith, Kanye West, Jim
Carrey and Tina Fey among them — than for any actual humor generated.
A couple of trailers today, starting with Alexandros Avranas» thriller «Dark Crimes» starring Jim
Carrey as a cop who finds similarities
between an unsolved murder and a crime outlined in a book by famed writer Krystov Kozlow (Martin Csokas)...
Perhaps America isn't ready for a lusty gay relationship
between two big stars like Jim
Carrey and Ewan McGregor — or for yuks like one where the former scoffs at the latter for spitting rather than swallowing — but the movie seems cheerfully oblivious to any squeamishness on the audience's part.
Though, even with the shackles of veracity,
Carrey makes a last - minute save to his case with a new discovery and a reminder about the difference
between void and voidable agreements.
There's a wall painting going on not far from where I live that's a part of a Giant Storybook Project, a collaboration
between an art couple, Herakut, and Jim
Carrey (who, surprisingly, is something of a wall artist himself).
But given a choice
between a decent, honest, fun - loving Jim
Carrey and a boorish, jewelry - wearing, mirror - checking Brad Pitt, we would take Jim
Carrey, anytime.