Los Angeles Times

‘CHIPS’

Dax Shepard takes TV series into merrily idiotic smash ’em, crash ’em territory.

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM REVIEW justin.chang@latimes.com

A subtle difference in capitaliza­tion — the only thing here that can be remotely described as subtle — separates “CHiPs” the amiable 1977-83 TV show from “CHIPS” the dunderhead­ed new buddy-cop movie starring Dax Shepard and Michael Peña.

But the all-caps title more or less captures the bigger, more blockheade­d approach taken here by Shepard, who wrote and directed this merrily idiotic smash-up showcase in which cars crash into motorcycle­s, trucks plow into paparazzi and one guy’s face makes violent contact, as it must, with another guy’s junk.

That last gag is the sort of tiresome gay-panic grossout moment that “CHIPS” tries to get away with by having its participan­ts engage in deep discussion­s of what does and doesn’t constitute homophobia.

Serious philosophi­cal questions are raised: Is discomfort the same thing as bigotry? Should an aversion to same-sex face-to-crotch proximity automatica­lly be construed as homophobic? Can a movie be cheekily selfaware and still thoroughly terrible?

Without a doubt. And yet damned if “CHIPS” doesn’t somehow make the most of its own wink-wink awfulness. Its principal ambition — basically, to make movies like “The Dukes of Hazzard” and “Starsky & Hutch” look like rigorous masterwork­s of screen-to-screen adaptation by comparison — may be as shallow as the gutter. But from time to time, the movie does throw off its own crazy, moronic verve.

Shepard plays Jon Baker, a former X-Games motocross star who has joined the California Highway Patrol to impress and win back his exwife (Kristen Bell, Shepard’s real-life spouse). His partner (Peña) goes by the alias of Francis Llewellyn “Ponch” Poncherell­o, which really was the name of Erik Estrada’s character on the show; here, it’s practicall­y a dead giveaway that he’s really an undercover FBI agent trying to find out which crooked CHP officers are behind a series of armored-truck heists.

The dynamic between these two khaki-uniformed dudes is of the familiar oiland-water variety. Ponch is an insatiable sex fiend, Baker an obsessive monogamist. Ponch wants to keep his head down so he can get on with his investigat­ion; Baker insists on earning his CHP stripes and doing everything by the book.

Ponch doesn’t want to be buddies; Baker can’t stop talking about his personal life and his weird hang-ups, like the smell of other people’s homes. (This character detail lays some crucial narrative groundwork for a discussion of proper sexual hygiene.) More important, from an action standpoint, Baker is an extremely skilled daredevil motorcycle racer, while Ponch can barely ride anything with wheels rather than legs.

This establishe­s a consistent pattern for the movie’s many high-speed chase sequences, most of which — whether they involve something as minor as a fenderbend­er or as excessivel­y gruesome as a decapitati­on — are more nimbly shot and choreograp­hed than they have any need to be.

I’m tempted to say I haven’t seen this city’s freeways, bridges and overall topography put to such busily inventive use since “La La Land,” but that was just five minutes ago (and that’s five minutes longer than you may remember “CHIPS”).

This is Peña’s his second buddy-cop role of the year, after the dirty detective he played in the British-made, New Mexico-set thriller-comedy “War on Everyone,” and he’s no less breezily irreverent here as a seasoned-but-sloppy investigat­or. Shepard, who brings to mind a less swattable Zach Braff, has his own offbeat charm: Touchingly open and earnest but also physically tough and quick with a comeback, his Jon Baker is an eccentric comic creation, to say the least (and you sometimes wish he would).

The plot is needlessly convoluted and beside the point, the supporting cast a lazy grab bag of spare parts. Vincent D’Onofrio, as one of the CHP’s most imposing officers, shows up to bench press a few hundred pounds and warn Ponch and Baker not to get too nosy. Is he a good guy or a bad guy? (Is he played by Vincent D’Onofrio?)

You might wish the hardworkin­g women of the CHP— this group includes Jane Kaczmarek, Maya Rudolph, Jessica McNamee and Rosa Salazar — had been given more to do than telegraph their varying degrees of emotional and sexual availabili­ty. You might also wish that Shepard, for all his cheerful indifferen­ce to the expectatio­ns of TV nostalgist­s, had done more than simply crank out “‘Dumb & Dumber’ on motorcycle­s,” in the expert formulatio­n of Estrada’s former “CHiPs” costar, Larry Wilcox. TV’s Jon Baker hasn’t seen the movie yet but says he plans to rent it eventually. Sounds about right.

 ?? Warner Bros. Pictures / RatPac-Dune Entertainm­ent ?? ARE THE STREETS safe? Dax Shepard as Jon, left, Michael Peña as Ponch and Rosa Salazar as Ava Perez in the action comedy “CHIPS.”
Warner Bros. Pictures / RatPac-Dune Entertainm­ent ARE THE STREETS safe? Dax Shepard as Jon, left, Michael Peña as Ponch and Rosa Salazar as Ava Perez in the action comedy “CHIPS.”

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