Fool's Paradise (2023)

Fool's Paradise (2023)

A hollow, unfunny satire of Hollywood that can’t be saved even by its starry ensemble

3.5

Movie

United States of America
English
Comedy
2023
CHARLIE DAY
Adrien Brody, Aixa Maldonado, Alanna Ubach
99 min

TLDR

A zinging satire of Hollywood excess, but not in the way it wants to be.

What it's about

A struggling publicist (Ken Jeong) and a mute man (Charlie Day) ride the rollercoaster of fame together when the latter is unwittingly cast as the lead in a big Hollywood production.

The take

An interesting premise quickly sputters out in Fool’s Paradise, writer-star Charlie Day’s misfire of a directorial debut. Day plays a down-and-out Charlie Chaplin-esque mute who happens to be a dead ringer for a difficult method actor (also Day) who’s stalling production on a Billy the Kid remake — and so he’s brought in by the movie’s producer (Ray Liotta) to star instead. 

The rest of Fool’s Paradise follows in this vein, as things just happen to Latte Pronto (as he comes to be named). There’s wry satirical potential in this set-up: a lot can be revealed about someone (in this case, the self-serving stars, agents, and directors of Hollywood) by what they project onto a blank slate like Latte. The problem, however, is twofold: Fool’s Paradise doesn’t have anything especially sharp to say about the biz — and, in the absence of clever or indeed funny writing, the film’s weak center is exposed. Day’s wordless performance is understated to a fatal degree; presumably designed to highlight the ridiculousness of the Hollywood players he’s surrounded by, it only shows up the weakness of the material and the unfocusedness of some of the key supporting performances. Maybe the movie would’ve fared better had some of its other characters been silent instead.

What stands out

Fool’s Paradise becomes a much more engaging watch if you simply treat it as an exercise in pointing at the screen and saying, “I know them!”. The cast is layered with familiar faces, from Day’s It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia cast mate Glenn Howerton to movie stars like Adrien Brody, John Malkovich, and the late, great Ray Liotta (in one of his final performances). There’s not much of worth for them to do here, but wondering who will pop up next is one of the few things lightening an otherwise grueling 90-something minutes.

Comments

Add a comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

More like this in

Unfrosted (2024)

A fun but ultimately too-childish romp about the discovery of the Pop-Tart

6.8

The Idea of You (2024)

A smart albeit dry romantic comedy that unwittingly contradicts its empowering message

6.9

Idiots and Angels (2008)

Miserable scoundrel transforms into unwilling good-doer in this strange and cynical animated comedy

7.0

Prom Dates (2024)

A cute but ultimately cliched take at the “night before prom” teen film

6.7

Cleaners (2019)

A weird and wonderful coming-of-age anthology featuring classic moments in 2000’s Philippine high schools

8.4

Leave the World Behind (2023)

Shyamalan meets Black Mirror in this hugely entertaining, visually inventive apocalyptic thriller with a killer ending

8.2

Problemista (2024)

Dark, weird, poignant, and funny, this debut feature by Los Espookys star Julio Torres is a modern parable of the American Dream

8.6

Wind River (2017)

Sicario's screenwriter directs this story of murder in an Indigenous reserve

9.4

Falling in Love Like in Movies (2023)

A contemplative Indonesian romance film that rewrites and re-examines the genre’s conventions

8.4

The Farewell (2019)

Awkwafina shines in this complex culture clash comedy.

9.1

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.