movie review

Gulliver’s Travels

Jack Black discovers there are no small people, only small minds.

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I can just picture the development meetings for this film: “Let’s take a beloved children’s story, cast a goofy actor in the lead role, throw in some potty humor, and release it in 3D!” Ok, Jack Black produced the movie, so it would have been more like “Let’s cast myself in the lead role…”

Jack Black has carved out a nice little niche for himself in the film industry, playing the pudgy loser who somehow manages to save the day and maybe even get the girl. In ‘Gulliver’s Travels,’ he plays Lemuel Gulliver, the pudgy loser who works in the mail room at a New York newspaper. His prospects for getting out of the mailroom anytime soon are slim to none.

When a new hire (T.J. Miller) is suddenly promoted as his boss, Gulliver realizes he needs to make a change. So he plagiarizes his way into an assignment for Darcy Silverman (Amanda Peet), the cute travel editor he’s had a crush on for five years but can’t bring himself to ask out (even though she seems willing and even hints at the idea).

The fluff piece involves Gulliver traveling to the Bermuda Triangle – alone in a boat with less-than-zero boating skills – where he’s swept into a column of swirling water and deposited on the shores of Lilliput, a kingdom full of tiny people, including Princess Mary (Emily Blunt), the dull General Edward who’s courting her (Chris O’Dowd), and the imprisoned nobody who loves her from afar (Jason Segel).

Thus sets the stage for “there are no small people, only small minds,” which Gulliver finally realizes during his many adventures. It’s a good message for kids: don’t get sucked into stagnant thinking. Dream big and reach for those dreams.

The humor in ‘Gulliver’s Travel’s is classic Jack Black, so if you’re not a fan, you probably won’t like this movie. There are assorted uses of the word “awesome,” a few musical moments, and heart-to-heart talks with people who need some common sense drummed into them. A mildly funny scene finds Gulliver instructing the Lilliputians to create a giant media room and re-make famous movies like ‘Avatar’ and ‘Titanic’ – only with Gulliver in the leading role.

There’s also plenty of potty humor throughout the movie, so look for scenes involving wedgies, butt-cracks, and massive amounts of urine. That one was particularly gross.

I’ve always liked Jack Black, but consider 2003’s ‘The School of Rock’ the high point of his career, with 2008’s ‘Kung Fu Panda’ a close second. I get the feeling that ‘Gulliver’s Travels’ was engineered to keep him in our minds until ‘Kung Fu Panda 2’ comes out next spring.

The problem with ‘Gulliver’s Travels’ is that 1) it relies too much on Jack Black’s humor; and 2) it doesn’t rely enough on Jack Black’s humor. It’s a no-win situation. They don’t even include the big line from the trailer where he swings around and tells Darcy, “We’ll see you in three weeks with a story that’s gonna blow your mind!” And I knew everyone in the audience was waiting for it.

‘Gulliver’s Travels’ is available in 2D (which I saw) and 3D formats. I don’t see how the 3D version could have improved the subject matter. 

Could Jack Black have run his course as Jack Black? I guess we’ll find out in the coming year with ‘Kung Fu Panda 2,’ ‘Bernie’ (Richard Linklater’s comedy about a mortician who kills a wealthy widow), and ‘The Big Year’ (David Frankel’s film about three bird watchers hoping to spot the rarest bird in North America).

In the meantime, maybe someone will craft a romantic comedy where Emily Blunt plays a princess who’s loved afar by Jason Segel. If there’s any chemistry in this movie, it’s between those two. Maybe Jack Black could focus on ‘School of Rock 2.’ Or not. 

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