Movie Review of You Again
Human beings can change. This emerges from “You Again”, a comedy disreputable and laborious lacking both nerves and rhythm. Marriage is supposed to be the happiest moment of a lifetime. But we must pay attention to his family that can spoil the party anytime.
In fact the sister of Will (James Wolk), Marni (Kristen Bell), dislikes her future sister-Joanna (Odette Yustman), accusing him of having ruined her adolescence. When she learns that her own mother (Jamie Lee Curtis) is at odds with the aunt (Sigourney Weaver) to Joanna, the celebrations are likely to go wrong.
Sometimes there’s nothing worse than the past. This is something that depends on their two generations of women who eagerly seek to obtain an apology from their nemesis. This premise could have made a poignant drama or suspense scary, but it is here treated in the mode of comedy. One where the few laughs are meant supported and repetitive situations, which is never in the service of the feature film.
Buoyed by a staged without relief of Andy Fickman (to whom we owe the few memorable “She’s the Man”, “The Game Plan” and the remake of “Race to Witch Mountain”), the set’s apparent that a common textbook teaching is high, as monarch. Regardless of yesterday’s events, we must live in the present, let the rider a chance and believe in your lucky star. These entities are pink forget standing rivalries with one or two movements, which is rather hard to believe and accept.
This speech can only harmless affect the gags that miss their target, these little dialogues on these readings and dance numbers and songs that are virtually useless. Everything flafla actually hides characters who feel terribly empty one emotion. A big disappointment with the talented people that never met to believe in their distress. Sigourney Weaver spent her time murdering the accents, the duo Kristen Bell and Odette Yustman does not always work properly, and it is sad to see Jamie Lee Curtis ridicule for nothing. There is almost as Betty White, who earned a smile or two in the skin of a mischievous grandmother.
As interesting as the production that is broadcast 63 times a year on TV on Sunday mornings (one that can barely capture a few minutes every half hour), “You Again” suffers from the lack of scale and its themes capital that are treated carelessly. Here it is not really about to face his demons to live a better life, but to teach viewers to be careful before opening a Pandora’s box again. No, that nobody knew.







