I Heart Huckabees movie review, I Love Huckabees, David O. Russell, Jude Law, Naomi Watts, Mark Wahlberg, Dustin Hoffmann, Lily Tomlin, Jason Schwartzman, Isabelle Huppert, Kevin Dunn, Tippi Hedren, Shania Twain. Review by Rob Blackwelder ©SPLICEDwire
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♥s & MINDS
A scene from 'I Heart Huckabees'
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"I ♥ HUCKABEES"
3stars
105 minutes | Rated: R
NY/LA: Friday, October 1, 2004
LIMITED: Friday, October 8, 2004
EXPANDS: Friday, October 15, 2004
Co-written & directed by David O. Russell

Starring Jason Schwartzman, Dustin Hoffmann, Lily Tomlin, Jude Law, Naomi Watts, Mark Wahlberg, Isabelle Huppert, Kevin Dunn, Tippi Hedren, Shania Twain



 NEW INTERVIEW
Read our interview Writer-director David O. Russell gets existential


 PREVIOUS INTERVIEWS
Read our interview David O. Russell (1999)
Jason Schwartzman (2002)
Naomi Watts (2001)


 COUCH CRITIQUE
   SMALL SCREEN SHRINKAGE: 50%
   WIDESCREEN: RECOMMENDED

It will be harder to wrap your head around this weird comedy on the small screen. Don't get it hoping for something to keep you company during chores or you'll be lost in no time.



 OTHER REVIEWS/COMING SOON
 
  • David O. Russell
  • Dustin Hoffmann
  • Lily Tomlin
  • Jason Schwartzman
  • Jude Law
  • Naomi Watts
  • Mark Wahlberg
  • Isabelle Huppert
  • Kevin Dunn


  •  LINKS for this film
    Official site
    at movies.yahoo.com
    at Rotten Tomatoes
    at Internet Movie Database
    Metaphysical hokum and closed minds get grilled in David O. Russell's curious, off-kilter comedy

    By Rob Blackwelder

    The one philosophy behind the existential screwball comedy "I ♥ Huckabees" (pronounce the ♥ as "heart") is that there is no one philosophy. A satire of spiritual gurus, self-help and other psychological gimmickry, it makes its point by being so esoteric and cerebrally akimbo that it will likely divide audiences between those who find its deliberately abstruse discombobulation amusing and to the point, and those who find it just abstruse and discombobulated.

    Written and directed by David O. Russell, the observant and darkly comical wit behind the Gulf War derision "Three Kings," the ensemble storyline whirlpools around Albert Markovski (Jason Schwartzman), an unhinged and obsessive young environmentalist who has seen the open-space preservation group he chartered slip through his fingers and into the hands of a snake-oil-charming corporate stooge named Brad Stand (Jude Law). Brad is, in fact, an executive at Huckabees -- a slick, corporate retailer with a habit of moving into small towns and building megastores where there had once been open space.

    With his failure causing him to question his whole life, Albert seeks metaphysical peace of mind from Bernard and Vivian Jaffe (Dustin Hoffman and Lily Tomlin), a pair of unconventional, off-kilter and out-of-sync private eyes who specialize in solving the mysteries of their clients' inner turmoil. Soon they are, quite conspicuously, following Albert to work, peering through his windows, digging through his trash, and pairing him up with another lost soul as a partner in intellectual recovery -- Tommy (Mark Wahlberg), a blue-collar lug of a firefighter whose eye-opening visit inside his own head has rapidly become a slide into bemused Nihilism.

    "Huckabees" begins weird (when Beatles-shagged, quaintly befuddling Hoffman explains one of his theories of spiritual interconnection, the screen breaks into surrealist fragments that float around and reconnect to illustrate his point) and gets weirder. Soon superficial Brad has hired the detectives too (with ulterior motives), and so has Brad's dingy Huckabees-spokesmodel girlfriend (Naomi Watts). Both of them get far more emotional deconstruction than they bargained for from the arrangement, just as Albert and Tommy are being seduced by the Jaffes' arch rival -- a sultry, dark-minded French philosopher played by virtuosa Isabelle Huppert.

    Russell culls lightly ironic, against-type performances from his entire ingenious cast, and the Peter-Sellers-like vortex of eccentricity that seems to surround Jason Schwartzman in all his roles (think "Rushmore," "Slackers" or "Spun") is the perfect anchor for the film. But "I ♥ Huckabees" is most droll when you put all its pieces together and see it for what it really is: a sophisticated teardown of single-track belief systems.

    The film points out how simple it is to draw the weak-minded away from self-examination, presents devout believers in several schools of thought -- including willfully rigid religious types -- and mocks them all for being blinded to the possibility that there is no philosophy that answers all life's more profound and puzzling questions.

    Although "Huckabees" gets by more on its idiosyncrasy than its intelligence, those rolling with its dizzy punches and open-minded to its absurdity are in for a freaky post-Freudian fun time.






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