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Marshall Fine

Marshall Fine

Posted: November 29, 2010 09:23 AM

I Love You Phillip Morris is a movie that earns laughs by being transgressive -- right down to its title, which evokes the tobacco company (which has long since tried to disguise its identity by changing its name to Altria).

Written and directed by the Bad Santa team of Glenn Ficarra and John Requa, Phillip Morris (which opens in limited release on Friday, 12/3/10) is a politically-incorrect movie that happens to be a gay romantic comedy. It's also a wild story of an outlandishly nervy con man whose scams ultimately are all perpetrated in the name of love.

His name is Steven Russell and he's played with bold but not broad choices by Jim Carrey. First glimpsed as a Virginia cop with a house and family, Steven's life changes when he abuses his authority in order to track down his birth mother (he was told, unkindly, that he was adopted, when he was much younger). When he finally finds her -- and she blows him off without acknowledging him -- he decides it's time to stop living a lie.

So he comes out of the closet, gets a divorce and quits his job, moving to South Beach to immerse himself in what conservatives refer to as "the gay agenda." In his case, it's an ongoing orgy of hot sex, lavish parties and relentless shopping. But, as he observes, "being gay is really expensive."

To finance his new lifestyle, he becomes a scam artist -- specifically, a master of insurance and credit-card fraud. He is particularly good at slip-and-fall claims, liberally squirting cooking oil in a supermarket aisle before taking an elaborate pratfall that will earn him thousands in settlement money.

All good things must come to an end, however, and Steven eventually gets caught. For a well-organized gay man, however, prison is a breeze. And it gets better when he first lays eyes on Phillip Morris (Ewan McGregor), a sensitive little blond inmate who becomes the love of Steven's life.

From there, it's all about being reassigned as bunkmates, then getting out of prison together. None of these things is accomplished in anything resembling a legal manner, but Steven is brassy enough -- he's a con man, after all -- to pull them off by pretending to be a lawyer (he's booked lots of hours in the prison law library).

The struggle then becomes finding a way to support Phillip and himself in the manner to which Steven wants Phillip to become accustomed. When Steven talks his way into a CFO position at a major corporation, he can't resist running elaborate schemes on his new employer, because there's all that money just sitting there, waiting to be embezzled.

For a change, Carrey -- at one point the hottest comic performer in movies and still one of the most inventive -- has a role that allows to him to play big without going over the top. His version of Steven (the film is based on a true story) has a big imagination and a wide range of talents, but is still someone who is recognizably a human being, as opposed to some manic rubber man in captivity.

He makes Steven, finally, a heartsick, love-struck individual whose passion reaches obsessive levels. Carrey's spontaneity is always in service to the material, never at war with it. He's wholly credible as a guy who just wants to spend the rest of his life with the man he loves.

McGregor is, ostensibly, the normal one here, a slightly criminal guy who just wants to live a normal life -- and who, despite his love for Steven, doesn't want to have his heart broken and definitely doesn't want to get tossed back into prison. McGregor brings a sweetness and pliancy to the role that can't mask Phillip's determination to stay out of jail.

The script does flag, jokewise, the longer it goes on. But Requa and Ficarra are playing the long game, building to the bigger reveal of an audacious scheme that pays off in the end. The film goes from being outrageous to clever and smart, with moments of outrageousness sprinkled through the later going.

Ultimately, it is a movie that earns its stripes as being wildly inappropriate and quite funny. If it begins to run low on energy toward the end, it's still a wonderfully imaginative film (despite supposedly being based on a true story), a sleeper for the end of a year that's been short on laugh-out-loud comedies.


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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
skantea
A Resource Based Economy
07:35 AM on 11/30/2010
Great movie, I thoroughly enjoyed it from beginning to end. Carrey and McGreggor make a surprisingly cute couple. The romantic scenes seem genuine, not forced at all. I'll compare it to Bruno just for the sake of argument and say that it's nowhere near as cringe inducing (which was why I liked Bruno), and it's wholly believable and honestly a very 'sweet' love story.
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
07:19 AM on 11/30/2010
i got the dvd out of the library a couple of weks ago and i was very pleasantly surprised. i have certainly not seen jim carrey like this before.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
07:57 PM on 11/29/2010
I like the sound of this
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Robert Siciliano
07:07 PM on 11/29/2010
Excellent review, spot on and great movie. My interest in it was in regards to studying the behavior of a con man, but the movie is so much more than that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Crowley
see Bio
08:42 AM on 11/30/2010
In regard (no S) to what you said I agree!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jdaddy1951
05:10 PM on 11/29/2010
It sounds like it will be a disappointing movie and probably won't make it to my local Carmike Cinema complex --- famous for Spiderman sequels, horror movies and nothing much with mature or serious content. But if it does come, I will probably go see it, because it sounds like it might have some good points.
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Halsey
"There is a price to pay for speaking the truth. T
01:25 PM on 11/29/2010
If McGregor has better chemistry with Carrey that with Kidman (Moulan Rouge) that will be a VAST improvement.

(my fav Ewan film remains Big Fish, period, end of story :-)..and Carrey? I actually thought he was GREAT as the Grinch and decent as Evan Almighty. I hope this film works, selfishly as I have a gay oriented screenplay under consideration right now (yeah.like THAT's going to happen).

Cheers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Al in Madison
01:54 PM on 11/29/2010
I love Big Fish, as well! It's definitely my favorite Ewan McGregor movie!
10:13 AM on 11/29/2010
Great Movie, Great story, but just AWFUL Acting. Lets face it - Mr Carey is great at standup - but keep him away from Movies/Drama/Acting. Mr McGregor - normally an excellent actor; in the case of this mail he was Carey-d into mediocraty.

Would love to see this re-made with Philip Seymore-Hoffman and Sean Hayes