Montreal Gazette

TAG HAS THE TOUCH

Infectious romp highlights importance of friendship

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

There’s an inherent silliness in the idea of a movie about a game of tag. If it’s not funny, it’s going to get really boring. But perhaps the only thing stranger is an actual game of tag that lasts for 30 years. That’s the true story behind Tag, chronicled in The Wall Street Journal in 2013.

Names and details have been changed — though not, amazingly, the notion that you might quietly call one player “It” at his father’s funeral — in this lightheart­ed romp, full of cursing and cartoon violence.

Ed Helms stars as Hoagie, one of the more intense players in a game that has been going on among five friends since their grade-school days. The rules have evolved, although it’s still a “no girls” zone, despite sideline assistance from Hoagie’s wife (Isla Fisher). The game runs for each month of May, after which

the loser — there are no winners in tag, we’re reminded, just one loser — has to remain It for 11 months.

Hoagie’s plan is to round up his fellow taggers — CEO Callahan (Jon Hamm), pothead Randy (Jake Johnson) and maritally troubled Sable (Hannibal Buress) — and go in pursuit of Jerry (Jeremy Renner), who has never been It.

Renner is perfectly cast in the role of the extreme player, and seems to be dipping into his Avengers/Mission Impossible/Bourne tool kit to evade capture. In the hands of director Jeff Tomsic (mostly known for TV, and it shows), this involves a lot of slow-motion running and quick-cut fighting, but I’ll be the first to admit that Helms’s goofy mug never gets tiresome.

Writers Rob McKittrick and Mark Steilen do what they can to estrogen-up the screenplay, throwing in an old flame (Rashida Jones) and turning journalist Russell Adams into Annabelle Wallis, who basically embeds herselfwit­htheboysto­getthe story. And Leslie Bibb nails the part of Jerry’s effervesce­nt fiancée — we’re never quite sure how forgiving she’s going to be as the tag shenanigan­s (tagnanigan­s?), threaten to upset her perfect May wedding.

But the movie’s charm rests on its modest premise. Tag is one of the simplest pastimes and among the oldest, already referred to in historical terms by the secondcent­ury Greek scholar Julius Pollux. It may even predate human evolution, if the squirrels in my neighbourh­ood are anything to go by.

And sure, the film’s message about the importance of friendship and the value of play may be laid on a little thick at times. But there’s no denying its infectious nature.

You may even find yourself patting your movie-going companion on the back as you leave the theatre. “Thanks for the popcorn. Also, you’re It.”

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 ?? PHOTOS: WARNER BROS. ?? Jeremy Renner, left, is riveting to watch alongside Ed Helms and Leslie Bibb in Tag, a lightheart­ed movie based on true events.
PHOTOS: WARNER BROS. Jeremy Renner, left, is riveting to watch alongside Ed Helms and Leslie Bibb in Tag, a lightheart­ed movie based on true events.
 ??  ?? Hannibal Buress is among Tag’s appealing cast members, who keep the spirit of the game and the movie alive with their infectious performanc­es.TAG★★★ out of 5Cast: Jeremy Renner, Ed Helms, Jon Hamm, Isla Fisher Director: Jeff Tomsic Duration: 1h40m
Hannibal Buress is among Tag’s appealing cast members, who keep the spirit of the game and the movie alive with their infectious performanc­es.TAG★★★ out of 5Cast: Jeremy Renner, Ed Helms, Jon Hamm, Isla Fisher Director: Jeff Tomsic Duration: 1h40m

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