A while back, David and I were invited to see a sneak preview of the upcoming movie Hall Pass (set to release February 25th). We were wary but naively optimistic.
The casting was hopeful enough: Owen Wilson, Jenna Fischer (The Office's "Pam"), Jason Sudeikis, and Christina Applegate. But the premise was slippery: A wife (Fischer), gets fed up with catching her husband looking at other women, and is encouraged and finally convinced to give her husband a "hall pass." For one week Wilson gets to live as though not married, while the wife and children go out of town. And then the icing on the precarious cake: Hall Pass is directed by the Farrelly Brothers - the guys who brought us Dumb & Dumber, Shallow Hal, There's Something About Mary and Stuck on You.
Now, to be completely fair, this was a polled screening, so some of the content will change by the time Hall Pass actually hits theaters and it may not be quite as awful as our experience.
That said, the film actually began very well. David and I, being Office fans, were particularly excited to see Jenna Fischer playing Wilson's wife. She is a very cute and slightly complex character whom we both enjoyed. Wilson's character is set up as her decent but sometimes-bumbling, hard-working husband and father of two kids. Their interaction was my favorite part of the movie. They are caring and work hard to maintain chemistry as both a married couple and parents. He's best friends with Jason Sudeikis' character, who is married to Applegate - who is, coincidentally, Fischer's best friend.
Sudeikis was unfortunately and uncharacteristically very disappointing, playing an often lewd and scruple-free husband, taking every opportunity to dream about what could be with anything that walks by with breasts. Applegate's character is typical for her; self-absorbed, vapid and selfish. Their interactions are more often painful instead of what I think was an attempt at humor.
All of that out of the way, the movie starts out well, but slow. When it starts to pick up, it begins its slide downhill - rapidly. Sudeikis repeatedly encourages Wilson to try to have sex with another woman while he is 'free' of marriage. There are several exchanges with a male barista that go from one hilarious, witty exchange to a no-holds-barred barrage of ludicrous violence at the end that was indescribably unnecessary. There was a gym scene with male genitalia that seems to have been thrown in just for the sake of the typical Farrelly Brother nudity - and was almost unbearably uncomfortable, and of course a scene with breasts that was (finally, thankfully) brief. Language, drug references, alcohol and sexuality ran rampant throughout - and maybe that's your kind of movie. David and I, however, found ourselves looking at each other, cringing, more often than watching the movie toward the end.
Without trying to spoil the film for you, Hall Pass ends with resolution for one couple and disappointment for another. The overall tone of this movie is one of 'every man for himself'. This may be enjoyable for some, but as a married couple watching this it was completely uncomfortable and a very disappointing portrayal of marriage. I strongly recommend not wasting your time - and especially your money - on this bad excuse for a comedy. If you really want to see it, wait till it comes out on DVD (which I don't think will take long). This movie made David and I very leery of screenings for a while. I give Hall Pass 1.5 stars out of 5.



