Hartford Courant

Docuseries captures ‘Smartless’ trio taking podcast to US stages

- By Mark Kennedy

When actors Jason Bateman, Will Arnett and Sean Hayes get together, they can instantly tell if something’s wrong: If insults don’t immediatel­y fly, there’s a problem.

“I think it is our love language,” says Arnett, the “Arrested Developmen­t” star and voice of Batman in the “Lego Movie” franchise. “I’m kind of joking, but there’s a little truth to that. If we’re not making fun of you, we don’t love you.”

Fans of the trio’s banter are getting much more after a documentar­y film team captured the hosts on tour taking their popular podcast “Smartless” to U.S. stages.

The six-part docuseries “Smartless: On the Road,” now streaming on Max, offers a very intimate look at the three friends as they travel, hang out and prepare for the live shows.

“It was really just about living with one another,” says Bateman, star of “Arrested Developmen­t” and “Ozark.” “And it’s a fairly cringey assumption for us to make that it would make for entertainm­ent.”

While their guests include Conan O’brien, Will Ferrell, Matt

Damon, Jimmy Kimmel,

Kevin Hart, Alexandria Ocasio-cortez and David Letterman, the bulk of the series is a look at how Arnett, Bateman and

Hayes manage to dunk on each other and yet maintain a sibling love.

“The three of us are incredibly close. I would dare say we are best friends. And with that comes a deep knowledge of where the rails are. I think we all know if we ever really wanted to hurt each other, we know where to go. But that’s not really in our makeup,” says Bateman.

Cameras capture the trio exercising together, visiting the Lincoln Memorial, exploring the connection between pooping and showering, and talking with their guests.

Directed by Sam Jones, the series is presented in black and white with an upbeat piano soundtrack. The original idea was to have the live shows in color and the behind-thescenes footage in black and white, but that was too jarring. The final result is, as Hayes puts it, “Classy for the classless clowns in it.”

On the podcast “Smartless,” which premiered in July 2020, one of the hosts reveals the mystery guest to the other two, and the guys kept that same format on tour.

Final approval on their podcast goes to the special guest, but with the documentar­y, they reserved the right for final cut. They said that made it more liberating since they didn’t have to censor anything they did.

“We knew that everything was safe to say because ultimately we’d be able to see it assembled,” says Bateman. “So we were able to just be really free and see what would float to the top.”

Getting used to the cameras — even though they’re all show business veterans — took some time. “I didn’t think I’d ever be able to accept them in the room, and I did. They kind of just went away,” says Hayes, the “Will & Grace” star.

Frequently, the friends spend time on food — ordering room service, talking about meals, worried about bloating and ripping on each others’ orders. After making one extensive room service order, Bateman asks the kitchen: “You don’t have any chest paddles down there, do you?”

“The jabbing is the love,” says Hayes. “Till the day I die, I’ll consider Jason and Will my brothers. And if there’s even a word that means closer than that, that’s what I feel they are.”

 ?? MAX ?? Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes and Will Arnett are seen in “Smartless: On the Road.”
MAX Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes and Will Arnett are seen in “Smartless: On the Road.”

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