Ottawa Citizen

Film a wedding disaster

- TINA HASSANNIA

Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates is a poor imitator of recent over-the-top wedding-themed comedies: Bridesmaid­s, Wedding Crashers and The Hangover. But unlike those films, which attempted to brand their own style of humour, Mike and Dave consistent­ly falls flat by aligning itself with the dumb-jock humour of Dane Cook. This unfunny, insipid mess of a movie relies so heavily on physical gags and obnoxious vocal inflection­s that at times you forget you’re watching a movie — it could very well be a bad night at an improv comedy bar.

Such mediocrity is a shame because, on paper, the film’s premise sounds promising, the sort of mad-cap adventure found in the Preston Sturges-era of screwball comedies. Mike (Adam Devine) and Dave Stangle (Zac Efron) are man-children whose perilous antics at previous family parties have led their parents to demand they bring “good girl” dates to their sister Jeanie’s (Sugar Lyn Beard) upcoming destinatio­n wedding in Hawaii.

After placing a Craigslist ad that goes viral, the brothers meet Alice (Anna Kendrick) and Tatiana (Aubrey Plaza), a couple of wild girls pretending to be docile, decent women so they can get a free weeklong vacation. All they have to do is wear ladylike dresses and claim to have profession­al careers in teaching and hedge-fund management.

Naturally, it doesn’t take long before their act dries up, but the family is quick to pin any little thing that goes wrong on the brothers, not the innocent female strangers. Among other acts of supposed civility, Tatiana and Alice pull stupefying stunts, like popping ATV wheelies during a tour of the set of Jurassic Park. Mike and Dave are pressured to follow suit in order to look manly, but end up mangling their soon-to-wed sister’s face — on the day before her wedding.

Mike, Dave, Tatiana and Alice are not malicious by nature: as the film demonstrat­es, they’re just too reckless to realize the consequenc­es of their actions. For example: Alice believes the key to relaxing the poor, maltreated Jeanie is to overtip her masseuse and request a “happy ending.” The masseuse — a fantastic Kumail Nanjiani who deserves better than bit roles in dumb comedies — brings Jeanie to orgasm multiple times through some indirect back/buttock massage technique involving his Indian-guru aura (how unsurprisi­ng that a film this dumb would also utilize racist stereotype­s). Alice’s bright idea works out (Jeanie is finally able to relax), even though the set-up seems destined for disaster.

Elsewhere, Alice’s cluelessne­ss backfires, like when she offers to take ecstasy pills with Jeanie the night before the wedding. This is one of a few examples where the harebraine­d antics lead to some funny moments — like a hallucinat­ing Alice and Jeanie freeing horses from a stable — but overall the characters don’t offer any sort of entry to us liking them. This is important because the film demands real character arcs — they share the realizatio­n that they must grow up. But why would an audience identify with people this idiotic and have stakes in their growth?

If vapid vaudevilli­an acts are your thing, Mike and Dave should please enough, but those allergic to brash comedy should stay far away.

 ?? GEMMA LAMANA/20TH CENTURY FOX ?? Aubrey Plaza, left, Anna Kendrick, Adam Devine and Zac Efron fall flat.
GEMMA LAMANA/20TH CENTURY FOX Aubrey Plaza, left, Anna Kendrick, Adam Devine and Zac Efron fall flat.

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