USA TODAY US Edition

Amy Schumer is seriously good in ‘Thank You for Your Service’

- Brian Truitt

There comes a time in every comedian’s movie life to veer toward the dramatic. Adam Sandler traded in goofy The Waterboy antics for Punch

Drunk Love. Steve Carell made us laugh in The Office, then freaked us out with his Oscar-nominated role in Fox

catcher. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences also took notice of Eddie Murphy in Dreamgirls years after he was arguably the biggest comedy star of the 1980s.

Now Amy Schumer is dipping into serious stories with her role in the drama Thank You for Your Service (in theaters now), which follows a group of soldiers back from Iraq as they struggle with PTSD and reacclimat­e to home life. And she’s doing so just five months after unleashing semen jokes and over-the-top high jinks with Goldie Hawn in the forgettabl­e Snatched.

So does Schumer, who won an Emmy for her Comedy Central sketch show, stand out in her dramatic debut? Well, not really — though that’s kind of the beauty of her supporting role. Wearing no makeup, dressed down and eschewing blond hair for brown, Schumer plays Amanda Doster, a war widow and mom who appears early in the story. She pulls Adam Schumann (Miles Teller) aside — before he can even greet his own family — to plead for informatio­n about how her husband died. “Did he suffer? I need to know,” she says, trying to keep her emotions in check.

What actually happened is a mystery that plays out through the film, and Schumer’s character is essential to Adam coming to grips with his own war experience­s, even if she shows up in only a handful of sequences. The moving and surprising­ly well-crafted film is full of performanc­es that aren’t showy but weave together powerfully,

The soldiers’ suicidal thoughts and betrayal by loved ones add to the weight of the overall piece, but Schumer’s role is also interestin­gly timely: Amanda’s yearning for the truth mirrors similar questions raised by the widow of Army Sgt. La David Johnson, one of four American soldiers killed by extremists in an ambush in Niger this month.

It actually tracks with Schumer's offscreen personalit­y. In addition to being funny, she is known to tackle real-world issues on social media, such as gun control and human traffickin­g. Even with a small role, her appearance could bring in people who might be more apt to see a movie that tackles problems returning veterans face daily if she’s in it.

In that sense, Schumer might be of service in more ways than just showcasing strong, untapped acting chops.

 ??  ?? Schumer breaks out of her comedy wheelhouse for a dramatic turn as a war widow who wants to know how her husband died. ANGELA WEISS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Schumer breaks out of her comedy wheelhouse for a dramatic turn as a war widow who wants to know how her husband died. ANGELA WEISS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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