Reviews now on YouTube! | Watch here

Larsen On Film

  • Review Library
  • Subscribe
  • Why I’m Wrong
  • About
  • Books

Baxter, The

Comedy largely exists to soften life’s uncomfortable truths, but The Baxter rings a bit too true for its own good. Writer/director/star Michael Showalter means to make a romantic comedy from the point of view of the other man – you know, the perfectly pleasant, perfectly dorky guy who gets left at the altar when the heroine reunites with her true love. It’s a fine idea, yet with his lead performance Showalter doesn’t so much deconstruct the ‘nice-guys-finish-last’ maxim as he does prove why it’s often true. Speaking with the careful enunciation of someone learning a new language, grinning so sheepishly he looks as if he’s about to swallow his own face, Showalter’s Elliot Sherman has no other qualities beyond his irreversible nerdiness. Elliot is a one-dimensional loser; everyone in the audience would leave him at the altar.

Recent Reviews

Yojimbo (1961)

Comedy Rated NR

“Although swords strike and blood flows, Yojimbo mostly registers as a comedy.”

Love & Basketball (2000)

Drama Rated PG-13

“If someone knows the one true thing about you, that might be enough for a life together.”

Tampopo (1985)

Comedy Rated NR

“Itami squeezes Japanese food customs, even as he offers a fondly humorous survey of them.”


Search Review Library

Sponsored by the following | become a sponsor



SUBSCRIBE


Sign up to receive emails

Sign up to get new reviews and updates delivered to your inbox!

Please wait...

Thank you for signing up!




FOLLOW ONLINE



All rights reserved. All Content ©2024 J. Larsen
maintained by Big Ocean Studios

TOP