The New Zealand Herald

Celebs in on joke but we’re not laughing

Netflix’s movie version of Ferns sorry case of funny ha nah

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The other night I sat down to watch Netflix’s new comedy Between Two Ferns: The

Movie and then spent the next 80 minutes or so not laughing. I wanted to. But it just wasn’t funny. At all.

What it was, was terrible. The only genuine laughs came when the film finished and a bunch of bloopers rolled alongside the credits. What they should have done is scrapped the trash film and just given us 80 minutes of outtakes. That woulda been far, far funnier and I’d be recommendi­ng it unequivoca­lly. But they didn’t.

Instead, Between Two Ferns: The

Movie sees the movie’s star, comedian Zach Galifianak­is, playing out his played out schtick between two segments. There’s the purposeful­ly awkward, wilfully mean interviews with celebrity guests coupled with a road trip story that serves to shuffle Galifianak­is from one celeb to the next.

But unlike Sacha Baron Cohen’s

recent, devastatin­g series Who Is America?, where the interviewe­es had no idea they were being set up, here the celebritie­s are entirely in on the joke. Bereft of their ignorance, there’s no opportunit­y for an honest reaction which renders the interviews entirely toothless.

Still, at least he can ask funny questions, right? “When did you get your first period?” he asks Captain Marvel’s Brie Larson. LOL? No.

Okay, that’s not entirely fair — there are a few decent quips in the film: “On a scale of one to 100, how many words do you know?” he asks Keanu Reeves. Later, interviewi­ng Awkwafina, one of the stars of Ocean’s 8, he muses that he’d, “love to see an all male reboot,” of the film.

Humorous, yes, but mildly so and not really worth the interminab­le wait between them.

The celebrity guests like Paul Rudd, Matthew McConaughe­y and Tessa Thompson may find it knee slappingly funny being on the receiving end of his roasts, but the best I got out of it was a bemused “heh”.

This, friends, is the “funny” part of the movie. A direct continuati­on of Galifianak­is’ Between Two Ferns web series which would serve up short, quick blat episodes that you could sneak a peek at during your workday for a guaranteed LOL before alttabbing back to your Word doc or Excel spreadshee­t.

But in the context of a movie, with the weight of expectatio­n that brings, the concept just doesn’t stand up.

Galifianak­is’ brand is anti-humour and oddity but that’s no excuse for going with the cheapest and dumbest first idea he could come up with.

And that’s before we even get to the movie part of the movie. Dearie me. The road trip portion of the film which strings the interviews together is pretty much pointless. Perhaps there’s an argument to be made that the pointlessn­ess is the point. But if that’s the case, then why is it so lazy?

The road trip concept is a tired and hoary conceit that lurks at the bottom of the ideas barrel. Yes, Galifianak­is’ brand is anti-humour and oddity but that’s no excuse for going with the cheapest and dumbest first idea could he come up with.

But its biggest problem is that the bite-sized humour of the very funny web series just can’t be stretched out and stuffed into the structure and rigidity of a feature film. But you don’t have to take my word for it, the movie’s mercifully brief 83-minute running time is testament to that.

So why is this a thing? The only plausible explanatio­n I could come up with was that Netflix wanted a Between Two Ferns series but there was some problem getting the rights. Some money got thrown around, some palms got greased and voila` , a Ferns movie got the green light.

Still, freed from any box office commercial concern I can’t help but wish Galifianak­is had pushed the boat out with the movie a whole lot more; that he’d taken his concept and really ran wild with it to make something as peculiar, odd and weirdly funny as his reputation would lead you to expect. That he’d at least attempted — attempted — to be bold and daring by taking Netflix’s money and making something actually worth a damn.

But no. He made a handful of new episodes and tied them together with a lazy cliche´ d story that offers neither big laughs nor any ambition and I can’t decide which is worse. Sadly,

Between Two Ferns: The Movie wilts.

 ?? Photo / Netflix ?? Epic fail: Zach Galifianak­is in Between Two Ferns: The Movie.
Photo / Netflix Epic fail: Zach Galifianak­is in Between Two Ferns: The Movie.
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