Zoolander
Movie Review:
Stunning looks and a "cold steel"
stare have made Derek Zoolander (director/co-writer/star
Ben Stiller) the world's top male fashion model. But when
Stiller's supplanted by rival Owen Wilson, he takes a job
with clothing designer Will Ferrell that's a smokescreen
for a devious scheme to turn the brain-dead Stiller into
a brainwashed killer and have him assassinate the prime
minister of Malaysia! Satiric haute couture comedy also
stars Christine Taylor, Jerry Stiller. 89 min. Widescreen
(Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Surround stereo,
French Dolby Surround stereo; Subtitles: English; audio
commentary; deleted scenes; outtakes; music video; photo
gallery; TV spots.
Ah the
life of a model. All that glamour, money, famous people
wanting to be your friend, and those outrageous parties,
the life that many dream of.
To many of us, we know that the glamour is often an illusion
as modeling is a world filled with backstabbing, infighting,
and all manner of leaches who use people and then spit them
out. Most people are well aware of this, but why do so many
people want to be a part of it? It is the desire for fame,
money, and all the trappings?
While
that is often part of it, the simple answer for some is
that they just do not know any better. Such is the case
of Derek Zoolander, three time male model of the year, and
inventor of the famous Blue Steel look.
Writer, Director, and Producer Ben Stiller has created with
the help of MTV movie awards writer Drake Sather, Derek
Zoolander, male model supreme and as clueless as he is famous.
Derek is a legend in his own, mind, obsessed with his looks,
and very jealous and petty. Ah, but beneath this shiny front,
there is a man in deep pain.
Derek
is up for an unprecedented fourth Male Model of the Year
award, and standing is his way, is the hot new model Hansel(Owen
Wilson) who Derek sees as a poser not worthy of any attention.
When the winner is announced, Derek strides to the podium
to give yet another acceptance speech. Fate has dealt Derek
a cruel blow, when he realizes that Hansel, has won the
award, and that he is no longer the top model in the world.
As a result, Derek suffers depression and starts to feel
vounerable and question his life and choices he has made.
Before
he knows what has happened, Derek has lost his three friends
in a gas fight accident, and is portrayed in a Time Magazine
cover story as an idiot. Desperate to find out if there
is more to life than a pretty face, Derek heads home to
work in the family business, coal mining.
Needless to say, Derek's father(John Voight), is not happy
to see his son back, and is even less impressed with his
male mermaid commercials, and lack of a manly job. The reunion
is short lived, and Derek soon becomes a pawn in a deadly
scheme created by designer, Mugatu(Will Ferrell), and his
hired muscle, Katinka(Milla Jovovich) from using him to
kill the new Malaysian Prime Minister. It seems the new
Prime Minister is bent on closing sweatshops in his land,
and since sweatshops are the backbone of the fashion industry,
and he is not willing to be bribed, he must be stopped at
all costs.
Assisting Derek in his quest to find himself and who is
behind the plot, are Stiller's real life Wife Christine
Taylor, as Matilda, a reporter and love interest, and comedy
legend, and Ben's father Jerry Stiller plays the head of
the Derek's modeling agency Maury Ballstein.
One
of the biggest surprises in the film is Wilson, who worked
with stiller previously in "Meet the Parents"
and "Permanent Midnight". Wilson portrays Hansel
as a deep, spiritual person, who while not as shallow as
Derek, is just as clueless, but a globe trotting thrill
seeker who is looks up to Derek secretly. When Wilson and
Stiller are on the screen, they have a great chemistry and
it results in some great comic moments in the film.
This film is one of those films that is difficult to review.
On one hand, it was stupid, lacking a story, and many of
the jokes were not that funny, or seemed forced. However,
there were some great laughs in the film, and on more than
one instance I caught myself laughing long and hard at some
of the antics that were unfolding on screen.
Stiller
shows that he is a talent, as he keeps Derek sympathetic
despite portraying him as shallow and selfish, yet sympathetic
and worth routing for. We learn that Derek is worried about
losing his fame, and that he family does not accept his
career. He also decides that he wants to help others, but
is not sure whom to help, simply "those who need help"
he proclaims.
What makes "Zoolander" interesting is the way
it shows the bad side of an industry while poking fun at
the excess. For example, we see the shallow, plotting characters
that are only concerned with who is hot today. We also see
the extreme measures some will take to succeed in the industry,
and we see the pain that many have when they realize that
they are hot today, and forgotten tomorrow as is the case
of a retired hand model played by David Duchovny.
As a
director, Stiller keeps the film moving along and does not
take himself or the film too seriously and as such neither
should the audience. While not the comedies that Stiller
gave audiences with "Meet the Parents", and "There's
Something About Mary", Stiller shows that he is not
afraid to try new avenues to express himself. In the lower
profile yet funny "Mystery Men: and "Keeping the
Faith" Stiller showed characters that he can get comedy
as either playing the straight guy, or as the over the top
character. At times, "Zoolander" is very funny,
as Derek has his extremes, yet has a sensitive, caring side
side. The walk off scene between Derek and Hansel is very
funny and had the audience in stitches. So how does the
final product add up? Much like a fashion show, gaudy, at
times extreme, some presentations hit, others miss, but
in the end, most of us had a good time. When seeing "Zoolander"
take a cue from Derek, and turn your brain off for a while
and you just might have a good time in spite of yourself.
3 stars
out of 5
Gareth
Von Kallenbach
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