Film reviews
The Vow
A saccharine and paint-by-numbers slice of romance, which is largely boosted by the appeal of its two leads.
Star Wars: Episode 1 - The Phantom Menace (3D)
The under-utilised 3D adds little to this prequel, which only serves as a sore reminder of the brilliance of the original films.
Any Questions For Ben?
The talented bunch of actors ably cut through the surface gloss, but it’s tough to remain invested in the plight of the self-absorbed lead.
Shame
It starts off as brutal but arresting stuff, and the two lead performances are scorching, but disappointingly dissolves into a case of tragedy for the sake of tragedy.
The Other Guys (Film)
Rating: M
Running Time: 107
Country: USA
Director: Adam McKay
Cast: Will Ferrell, Mark Wahlberg
Distributor: Sony
Release Date: September 09, 2010
Film Worth: $14.50
FILMINK rates movies out of $20 - the score indicates the amount we believe a ticket to the movie to be worthWith the two leads revealing pitch-perfect chemistry, this hysterically funny film is packed with bizarre dialogue and over the top action.

Two New York desk-jockey cops start packing heat in this outrageously funny action comedy. Mark Wahlberg plays a disgraced yet hotheaded beat cop, haunted by a high-profile screw-up, while Will Ferrell plays an officious pen-pusher with a hot, brainy wife (Eva Mendes) who he undervalues. The pair is given menial work such as completing paperwork for the rock stars of their department, a cocky and heroic cop team played by Samuel L. Jackson and Dwayne Johnson. Keen to shake off their "loser" label, our mismatched and bumbling duo join forces in dogged pursuit of a Bernie Madoff-type investment scam artist (Steve Coogan) and try to gain the respect of their colleagues.
The Other Guys is co-written and directed by frequent Ferrell collaborator Adam McKay (Anchorman, Step Brothers), who once again gives his lead free reign for constant off-the-wall sequences of bizarre dialogue, such as when Ferrell's character takes an insult too literally, or fails to grasp the concept of "good cop/bad cop." Wahlberg proves an excellent foil to Ferrell's bizarre humour, and the pair has enough chemistry to sustain the comedy throughout the grand scale action sequences. Ferrell's multi-faceted character is so tightly wound that it's fun to watch him unravel. Irish-born Ray Stevenson (TV's Rome) plays an Aussie villain, but his accent disappointingly makes a side-trip to South Africa on more than one occasion, while the soft-rock sounds of Little River Band feature in a hilarious running joke.
While mildly driven by the theme of corporate money juggling, McKay reserves his most savage blows for the end credits, listing a staggering roster of facts and statistics pertaining to recent US corporate fraud, government bailouts, and flagrant thievery that will have your jaw dropping in disbelief.
With plenty of inventive and nutty bits of dialogue, action and character moments, The Other Guys is a genuinely hysterical, laugh-a-minute comedy.


