- Jamie and I have no children. Without getting too personal, there are medical reasons this is (at least partially) true. But it is also true that the biological tripwire that is native to most successful living organisms which tells them its time to procreate has never gone off within my own system.
- I am longtime pals with the screenwriter for this movie. She more or less informed me that the movie was not in my demographic, and that no feelings would be hurt if I gave it a pass. But, dammit, if any one of you knuckle-heads writes a movie that plays near my house, its likely I'll go. And so I did head out to see this film on a sunny Sunday afternoon. Because I am supportive.
In general, this is not the sort of thing I'd normally consume as comedy (I DVR Eagleheart on Cartoon Network and still will watch things like Warrior of the Wasteland for a laugh), but I also generally don't rush to the theater for comedies, anyway.
Now, the crowd at this movie was particularly interesting as (a) I don't know what the make-up is of the new Slaughter Lane Alamo Drafthouse, but this was not the usual young genre freaks, and (b) oh my god, the number of pregnant women in the theater.
As someone without children, it was also interesting to hear the things the mass of the audience found hilarious (I assume in a "we've all been there") sort of way, and the things I found funny (small children "discovering" a dead animal in the woods and presenting it to Dad) which didn't get as much of a laugh.
This is absolutely the big, star-studded ensemble comedy it appears to be, following a half-dozen storylines with different bits of misadventure, tragedy and other ways of examining the same human experience from multiple angles. I do think with so many stories in the movie, there's a little something for everybody.