|
The In-Laws
(1979)
Director: Arthur Hiller
Cast:
Peter Falk, Alan Arkin, Richard Libertini
The In-Laws wasn't always an unknown movie.
In fact, it was the 18th highest grossing movie of 1979 (back when even
that ranking used to mean something.) But after just a few years, public
knowledge of it quickly dwindled to its present status, where only a few
people seem to know anything about it. Which is a mystery, because it's
a very funny movie, with direction from someone who brought us memorable
movies like The Hospital and Love Story, and
the screenwriter (Andrew Bergman) gave us movies like
Fletch
and The Freshman. The only reason I can think of its undeserved
status is the stars, Peter Falk and Alan Arkin - not that it's their fault.
Let me be more specific; though Alan Arkin has appeared in several popular
movies, he never quite became a big star in the public's eye. Peter Falk
did get a lot of fame from playing Columbo, and has managed to work fairly
steadily outside of that character, but the public still seems to only
associate him as Columbo. So I suspect many potential viewers were turned
off by this "bland" casting.
That's a shame, because this movie is a very satisfying
comedy, fast paced and filled not only with a number of laughs, but laughs
derived from different kinds of humor. It could be considered a smorgasbord
of comedy. The key for this movie to work depends on its stars to keep
pulling off the rapid comic delivery required of them, and the two stars
of The In-Laws do this beautifully. Watching them in action,
you'll see not just how funny they are, but how talented they are.
Sheldon Kornpett (Arkin) is a successful dentist in New
York, and is overjoyed that his grown daughter is about to be married in
just a few days. But he and his wife still haven't done one of the most
important steps parents must do when a child gets married - meet the in-laws.
That has been quite difficult for Sheldon to do, since their future son-in-law's
father, Vince Ricardo (Falk), is frequently away, with the explanation
he works in an "international consulting firm". Fortunately, Vince finally
gets some time off work, and he and his wife come over to the Kornpetts
for dinner. It isn't long into dinner, however, that Sheldon starts having
second thoughts to his daughter marrying into this family. This comes from
Vince's bizarre behavior at the table, which includes his telling of dangerous
eagle sized and baby-snatching tsetse flies (with beaks) he encountered
south of the border ("The enormous flies flapping slowly towards the sunset..."),
and his crazy rant when his son makes a passing joke about his penchant
for mysterious phone calls when he asks the Kornpetts if there's a private
place where he can call his business.
After the Ricardos have left, Sheldon is dead set against
his daughter marrying a man with such a wacko father, though she and his
wife manage to somehow calm him down and relieve his fears, and convince
him to try and be accepting of this oddball behavior. The next day, Vince
drops into Sheldon's office, and asks him for a favor. See, there are these
two... business competitors... hanging outside of his office, waiting for
him to take out some of his documents out of his safe. Could Sheldon spare
five minutes to go into the building so the documents could be taken out
without the competition knowing about it? The request sounds a little odd,
but Sheldon doesn't really see anything wrong it, and agrees to help Vince.
Then...well, let's just say that Sheldon finds himself with Vince in a
situation that's going to take a heck of a lot more than five minutes to
resolve.
I'll say it again, it's the performances of Arkin and
Falk that really makes this movie work; they are a fabulous comedy team.
Arkin goes through a wide range of hilarious reactions, including reprising
the numbed/stunned mumbling and managing to stay bland while shouting that
he showed off in Fire Sale a couple
of years earlier. He gets to show off a lot more here, hilariously pleading
and blubbering when a situation gets to be too much, or screaming louder
and louder as he learns more about an outrageous situation, such as the
hilarious scene at the restaurant. (This scene might have possibly inspired
the famous restaurant scene in When Harry Met Sally, by the
way.) He even manages to show off some talent in physical humor by performing
a couple of stunts that are not only funny but clearly had some risk to
them.
Falk is also very funny, though his comic performance
is that of a more subtle kind of comedy. It's kind of a variation of his
Lieutenant Columbo character, with him being equally dry and casual in
his manner, though here he's a little quicker, more witty, and with a gleam
in his eye. His constant explanations are done so patiently, so logically,
that they are funny even if the particular piece of dialogue being spoken
wasn't meant to be funny. So you can imagine how funny it is when he does
have something absurd to say, such as suddenly bringing up the subject
of sandwiches during a car chase. Falk also manages to bring life to asides
that would fall flat with most actors, like "Sometimes I'm so smart, I
scare myself!"
There are some even better lines and quick-or-you'll-miss-it
asides that Falk's delivery sparkles, like "Damn Canadians! Never stop
talking!" ("Believe me, I know what that's like.") The laughs in the movie
aren't just limited one one-liners, though. There are sight gags, like
the incredibly tacky art collection a general owns. There's physical comedy,
like the scene where Paul Smith (in a guest appearance) can't shoot the
dodging and frantic Sheldon just a few feet away, or the "Serpentine, Shelly!"
sequence later. The movie also manages no small achievement with a car
chase sequence. You probably know from movies like The Cannonball
Run that car chases meant to be funny never are, and we wait forever
for the darn unfunniness to be over. Incredibly, the comic car chase in
this movie is not only funny, it manages to run for just the right amount
of time.
Even in the greatest comedies, not every gag will work,
and The In-Laws does have some flat gags, some which are so lame it's hard
to believe Bergman also wrote the funny moments. The scene at the "Automatic
Car Painting" garage seems to be right out of a lame 1970s Hanna-Barbera
cartoon, and has the gag of finding animals in your Central American hotel
room EVER been funny? The denouement, while amusing, feels kind of tacked
on, as if the cast was called back to be hastily filmed it after an unsatisfying
test screening. You don't really have to pay any attention to it, because
this movie is one of those comedies where you don't have to think much,
if anything at all, about the story, but you can just sit back, relax,
and sponge up all the gags that fly out at you.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)See
also: Fire Sale, I Wonder Who's
Killing Her Now, Let It Ride
|