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ENTERTAINMENT
Witty writing makes 'What happened in Vegas'
Video Fun House film fans Jean Tarbett Hardiman and John Gillispie enjoyed the comic antics of Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher in "What Happens in Vegas," rated PG-13.
JOHN: I knew you were going to like this week's movie.
JEAN: How could you have possibly known that? I was expected to hate it, mostly because it's about people going wild in Vegas -- which has been done -- and because I am not a fan of Ashton Kutcher.
JOHN: Both Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher have plenty of comedy experience. Diaz did star with Jim Carrey in "The Mask" and with Ben Stiller in "There's Something About Mary." And Kutcher logged in all those years on "That '70s Show."
JEAN: I know. And I never watched that. Just to be fair from the start, I have no valid reason for disliking Kutcher as an actor. Maybe he subconsciously reminds of some little brat from elementary school or something -- I don't know.
JOHN: Anyway, "What Happens in Vegas" tells the story of Joy McNally (Diaz), who gets dumped by her fiancé, and Jack Fuller (Kutcher), who gets fired by his father. They go to Vegas with friends Tipper (Lake Bell) and Hater (Rob Corddry) to forget about their troubles.
JEAN: They accidentally get booked for the same hotel room, and after meeting, Jack dares Joy to go out with him. They both know it's a stretch, even from the start. She's an uptight stock broker/control freak, and he's a talented but not very motivated carpenter/commitment-phobe. After a wild night on the town, they end up married.
JOHN: Realizing they have made a mistake, Jack and Joy start to separate until Jack uses Joy's quarter to win $3,000,000 in a slot machine.
JEAN: They land in court with the very funny Dennis Miller in the role of Judge Whopper. The judge is tired of lazy marriages, and so he freezes the money and orders the couple to live together for six months and go to marriage counseling sessions.
JOHN: They both try to drive the other person crazy and into cheating so that they can get all the money. Queen Latifah plays Dr. Twitchell, who is assigned to the couple as a marriage therapist. Unfortunately, Queen Latifah is given very little to do with her role.
JEAN: The bulk of the movie is about two people who hate each other being forced to be married (because they both want that money) and sharing a teeny apartment -- and that's my favorite part. Anybody's who's married knows that even when you find the perfect mate, it takes work to live together in peace, and to see these two sharing space and deliberately trying to run the other off -- so they can claim all the money -- is pretty funny. I think it's the writing in this movie that makes it, actually. Very witty. And Rob Corddry was pretty good as Jack's best friend and lawyer. So is Bell as Joy's friend.
JOHN: Even though I thought this movie was predictable, I enjoyed it because of its two stars. I thought the scenes in Vegas at the beginning and end were too short and much funnier than the rest of the film.
JEAN: I enjoyed the middle of the movie more.
JOHN: There you have it. I recommend the beginning and end and Jean recommends the middle.
JEAN: I guess we've got it covered.
Jean Tarbett Hardiman is a reporter for The Herald-Dispatch. John Gillispie is the public relations director for the Huntington Museum of Art. Contact the writers at jeant@herald-dispatch.com.
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