Wednesday, July 11, 2012

TJE 7/11 – Anchorman (2004)

For the first twenty minutes of "Anchorman," I couldn't wait for the movie to be over. There on the screen was Will Ferrell as the 70s news anchor Ron Burgundy, displaying all the intellect and maturity of an eight-year-old boy pretending to be the coolest man in the universe. And there were his friends, the rest of the news team, even more clueless and awful, particularly the way they talked about women. Anticipating another seventy minutes of crude sex jokes and middle school jibes parading as real dialogue, I was ready for the worst. And then Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate) came into the picture, promptly shot down every moronic innuendo and Neanderthalic pick-up attempt aimed her way. And then she went out with Ron Burgundy, on a "strictly professional" outing that inevitably turned into a real date. And then the movie went completely insane and never looked back. And it was awesome.

"Anchorman" is a spoof of a certain conception of manliness from the 70s, one that involves being smooth with the ladies, looking great in a suit, having good hair, and sporting a really impressive-sounding name. It exists in a heightened, cartoonish reality where rival news teams will rumble with deadly weapons, and a night of bliss for Ron and Victoria becomes a literal animated sequence where they're romping about riding unicorns in a fantasy land full of rainbows. Song numbers require little provocation, and Ron manages to impress Victoria with a virtuoso jazz flute performance. As the visual gags piled up, and I started thinking of "Anchorman" as a live-action equivalent of "The Venture Bros" with news reporters, the humor clicked for me. I got the joke that these trustworthy looking television personalities were really a couple of numbskulls who could read off a teleprompter, their egos quickly deflated when a real, competent, professional journalist comes into their midst.

Will Ferrell's usual shtick is playing the overgrown idiot man-child, but it only works when he's in the right kind of movie. In "Elf," he got to play off the perfect premise of being a man raised by Christmas elves to be unusually innocent and childish and sweet. In "Anchorman," Ron Burgundy is only a sympathetic lead character because he's part of this bizarro version of 1970s San Diego, where everybody loves and admires him for reading the news, and his bad behavior is enabled by hanging around with field reporter Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd), sports guy Champ Kind (David Koechner), and their remarkably dense weatherman Brick Tamland (Steve Carell). They say outrageously sexist things about women not out of any malice, but because they simply do not know any better. When Ron declares that he's in love, the other guys gather around incredulously to ask him what it's like. They're so clearly exaggerated fantasy characters, I could let their offensiveness and stupidity slide. It was all part of the joke.

And the jokes are funny. The best stuff is the absurdity connected to being a news reporter, where buying a new suit is an occasion for happiness, and insulting someone's hair is serious business. However, I was impressed with the level of the little incidental one-liners, and how well the numerous cameos are worked into the film. My favorite running gag involved the phone calls that the news director, played by Fred Willard, kept having just offscreen. It seems odd to talk about it in a comedy like this, but the worldbuilding of the "Anchorman" universe is excellent. Of course Ron's best friend is a dog named Baxter who is his intellectual equal. Of course the ultimate newscaster faux pas involves a teleprompter and a serious slight to local pride. Of course the most important news story of the year is Ling-Wong the panda's pregnancy. And then there were all the little visual delights like Champ’s cowboy hat and the cat fashion show and one really well-aimed trident.

The cast is great all around, and full of familiar faces. Steve Carrell is a notable scene-stealer, a couple years before he really broke out. Ditto Paul Rudd, working the smarm. I was especially happy to see Christina Applegate, who has to play things relatively straight next to the guys, but she's great at it and makes me wish she was in more movies. Will Ferrell is about par for the course - more annoying than he was in "Elf," but less annoying than he was in "Blades of Glory." I think the real winner here is writer/director Adam McKay. After seeing some of his other movies, this is the best thing he's done by a very wide margin. The premise is weird enough and well-realized enough that "Anchorman" really takes on a life of its own. I mean, basing a comedy around larger-than-life news reporters in the 70s? How the hell did they come up with this?

Who cares? Bring on the sequel!
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