Company Man (PG-13)
Political '60s spoof won't interest most teens.
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- Studio: Paramount Pictures
- Directed By: Douglas McGrath
- Cast: John Turturro, Sigourney Weaver
- Running Time: 81 minutes
- Release Date: 10/28/2001
- Video/DVD Release Date: 10/28/2001
- Genre: Comedy
- MPAA Rating: PG-13
- MPAA Explanation: sexual humor and drug content
Parents need to know
Families can talk about the actual events surrounding the Bay of Pigs invasion. Do you have to understand the history in order to appreciate the movie's humor? Do you like movies and TV shows that present alternate takes on historical events? Does it make a difference whether they're comedies or dramas? Why?
Message
Social Behavior:
An effeminate character is portrayed as a stereotypical gay man obsessed with decorating and fashion. Some Cubans are depicted as excitable and militaristic. Daisy is presented as a social-climbing shrew that Allen cannot wait to get away from. A joke abo
Consumerism:
Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco:
Characters drink and smoke. Allen and the other agents lace Castro's water with LSD (but Allen ends up drinking it and his drug-altered state is played for laughs).
Violence
A KGB officer falls off a moving car. Lots of fiery protests. A few gunshots. A character cuts himself with a knife and threatens to electrocute himself. Officers are knocked over, and Daisy is taken against her will. One character constantly expresses hi
Sex
A character discusses a visit to a brothel. Allen ogles his voluptuous housekeeper. Some sex-related jokes, which center around orgasms, lesbians, enemas, and JFK's infidelity. A few naked male posteriors.
Language
A few crude expressions. Occasional mild profanity.
Common Sense says
What's the story?
Reviewed by Beth Pratt
Allen Quimp (Douglas McGrath ) is a mild-mannered school teacher who makes up a story that he is a CIA agent. With that boast, Allen ends up bumbling his way into actually working for the CIA in Cuba. There a Cold War vigilante (John Turturro) asks for his help to take down Fidel Castro (Anthony LaPaglia).
Is it any good?
Like Forrest Gump, Allen Quimp has a talent for ending up at the right place at the right time and inadvertently setting historical events into motion. Unlike the other movie, however, COMPANY MAN is a gleefully over-the-top production in which silly gags and slapstick, not gooey sentiments comparing life to a box of chocolates, rule. To best enjoy this political romp, viewers should have some familiarity with the early 1960s setting. Although most teens will appreciate jokes about JFK's famous philandering, Marilyn Monroe, and "nobody ever buying something called a compact disc," a gag about how future leader Mikhail Gorbachev got the famous mark on his head may fly over theirs.
Still, even kids who have slept through history class may enjoy the actors' manic, cartoonish performances. Sigourney Weaver's turn as a materialistic, social-climbing Connecticut housewife who utters line such as "If my book doesn't outsell the Bible, I'll lose my faith in God" evoked hearty laughter from a young audience. Equally popular was Douglas McGrath's obsessive grammatical policing. However, not every gag works. A scene in which Allen and company plan to give Castro a bottle of shampoo that's mixed with a depilatory (they figure a bald leader won't be taken as seriously) but ultimately ends up being used by Daisy falls flat. And General Batista singing "Diamonds Are a Boy's Best Friend" at a lounge favored by blue-haired Miami Beach senior citizens was equally awkward. But overall, the jokes that work compensate for the duds. And don't rule out a sequel -- when the movie ends, Allen is sent to another "quiet place" -- Vietnam.
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