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The Adventures of Joe Dirt Movie Review:


In the new comedy "Joe Dirt", a slovenly janitor accidentally stumbles into a Los Angeles radio talk show, gets invited as a guest and begins telling his life story. His tale is a sad one. At the age of eight, he was ditched by his parents while vacationing at the Grand Canyon, and ever since he's been stumbling around from state to state, performing odd jobs and wondering why his mom and dad bolted. Soon all of Los Angeles (and the nation) are captivated by his story. The radio host conveys to Dirt his disbelief that someone who so perfectly embodies a white-trash idiot can maintain such a positive outlook on life and a potent tenacity to move forward. At this point I'm thinking to myself: if this guy really did have a positive outlook and potent tenacity, would he really embody a white-trash idiot to perfection?

Obviously, one can say I'm applying too much logic to a movie of this sort. But my above observation sums up the film's problem; the audience is expected to like the character of Joe Dirt, yet the movie clearly doesn't. It's like if "Wayne's World" was told through the eyes of Rob Lowe's villain. The movie hates this guy, why should we cheer for him? At about the midpoint, I did feel sorry for him, but that's not the same thing.

Joe Dirt is played by David Spade, who also co-wrote the screenplay. His underdog persona and sardonic wit work fairly well on NBC's "Just Shoot Me". His big screen forays haven't been nearly as effective. The movie spends so much time putting Dirt through a conveyor of condescending slapstick - everything from dousing him in crap (real crap, that is) to being cruelly laughed at and beaten up to even being tossed around by a crocodile - then pulling a one-eighty and hoping to gain the audience's sympathy. I'm all for sympathizing with a main character, but you can't expect me to love him after going to such lengths in humiliating him.

Consider the aforementioned "Wayne's World". Both films are about quirky and unusual characters, yet the respective tones sit at opposite ends of the comic spectrum. Wayne Campbell and Garth Algar - like Joe Dirt - are quirky and unusual outcasts who hold their own view of the world they inhabit.

Gary Gray

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The Adventures of Joe Dirt Info:

The Adventures of Joe Dirt Directed By:

The Adventures of Joe Dirt Written By:

The Adventures of Joe Dirt Cast:
Cast: David Spade
Brittany Daniel
Dennis Miller

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Reviewed by:
Gary Gray



 

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