Times Colonist

Wimpy Kid 4 a long, dreary haul

- LINDSEY BAHR

REVIEW

Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul Where: Capitol 6, Cineplex Odeon Westshore, SilverCity Starring: Jason Drucker, Charlie Wright,Owen Asztalos Directed by: David Bowers Parental advisory: G Rating: 1/2 stars (out of four)

Poor Alicia Silverston­e and Tom Everett Scott.

Between Clueless and That Thing You Do! they separately led two of the most charming and rewatchabl­e all-ages comedies of the ’90s. Cut to 20 some years later and they have been relegated to the thankless task of playing the dopey suburban parents in Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul,a deeply unfunny family road trip film that has gross-out jokes to rival the R-rated Vacation remake.

What have they, or any of us, done to deserve this fate?

At least they’re spared having someone vomit in their mouths. This does happen to another character, which director David Bowers films in slow-mo to truly give the mud-brown bile its full cinematic due. It’s not 3-D, but it might as well be.

This is technicall­y the fourth Wimpy Kid pic, based on cartoonist Jeff Kinney’s popular books about an awkward middle schooler, Greg. The Long Haul reboots the series with a new cast (the original kids aged out of the roles), including Silverston­e, Scott, Jason Drucker as the Wimpy Kid and Charlie Wright as his 16-year-old brother Rodrick, who all hop in the family minivan, with their toddler brother Manny, to travel cross country to attend their Meemaw’s 90th birthday party.

And not only is the Heffley family stuck together for a 47-hour trek to Indiana, but Mom has banned all their devices (even Dad’s), and decided that they’ll rely on How to Speak Spanish CDs, the Spice Girls and a game called I Must Confess to pass the time, with stops at a roach motel and a country fair in between.

Greg has other things on his mind, though — namely, how to become Internet famous. He already is, but not in the way he’d like. At the start of the film, Greg inadverten­tly becomes a viral sensation after a restaurant full of people start filming him freaking out that a diaper he inadverten­tly pulled out of a ball pit is stuck to his hand.

He hopes to relieve himself of this infamy by being in a video with a PewDiePie-like gamer named Mac Digby, who will also be in Indiana at a convention.

It’s an appropriat­ely vulgar subplot for a story that seems more disdainful of the messiness of the family experience than celebrator­y of it. According to this movie, nearly everything about family life, from the dreary food to the painful company, is dispiritin­g.

The Heffleys are forced to endure a series of relentless, everescala­ting hijinks, including a recurring thread pitting them against another family where neither comes out looking good, and one with a pig just to make things extra crazy. It even ruins a semi-clever Psycho shower scene sendup by tacking on some literal toilet humour.

It would be nice to think that Silverston­e and Scott might be able to tow any film out of a ditch with their comedic talents. Alas, they’re both stuck in neutral — Silverston­e as an underappre­ciated mom whose clichéd smiles wobble as though she’s on the verge of a nervous breakdown, and Scott as the affectless patriarch who is too scared to tell his wife he hasn’t requested vacation time for the trip.

The Diary of a Wimpy Kid series should go back to the drawing boards once more.

 ??  ?? Jason Drucker is middle-schooler Greg in Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul. In the latest instalment, the Heffley family is stuck together for a 47-hour road trip.
Jason Drucker is middle-schooler Greg in Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul. In the latest instalment, the Heffley family is stuck together for a 47-hour road trip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada