'Grimsby' - Review - Chris At The Pictures

Wednesday 24 February 2016

'Grimsby' - Review


★ ★


Louis Leterrier directs this zippy but far too humourless action comedy from Sacha Baron Cohen. Cohen stars as Nobby Butcher, a benefits-hoarding layabout who aches for the return of his long-lost brother Seb (Mark Strong). When the two finally cross paths, we discover that Seb is now a secret agent on behalf of queen and country, and Nobby’s interference in a critical assignment means the two must disappear back into the bowels of the town they call home: Grimsby.

Cohen is renowned for a less-than PC approach to comedy, but the stupefying, in-your-face brashness of Borat set a high bar that his following output has failed miserably to reach. Save for a dash of audacious offensiveness crammed into the botched opening mission, there’s really nothing to get riled up about, especially when later gags are made at the expense of Donald Trump. Talk about soft targets!

With political raspberry-blowing all but absent, we’re resigned to gross-out toilet routines the like of which The Inbetweeners could top on a sick day. Sporadically astute one-liners are not so much recycled in later stages as dragged clumsily from the scrap-pile. Lonely exception is found in an extended scene of searing, retch-inducing vileness in the face of which – more than a little shamefully – I was reduced to chokes of stomach-churning laughter.

Strong could play a spy in his sleep, and one hopes that he’ll find comedy work in future that leaves him looking less embarrassed as Cohen (all Liam Gallagher hair and beer belly) prances around him slurring unconvincing Northern dialect. A central schmaltzy plotline accompanies the two, a narrative effort so unconvincing that by the time we find England playing in the world cup final, suspension of disbelief has long since departed.

Bereaved of decent material, accomplished secondary players are stranded without saving grace. Penelope Cruz, Ricky Tomlinson and Tamsin Egerton are cast in blink-and-you’ll-miss-them roles, and Isla Fisher is the exasperated mumsy left to clear up after our doomed duo. Rebel Wilson regrettably tarnishes her recent winning streak as pratfall hand du jour Lindsey, Nobby’s devoted wife. 

I wonder how far into production Leterrier realised he wasn’t supposed to be making another Transporter movie. At least half of Grimsby’s nippy 80 minutes is devoted to extravagantly breakneck fare that – while capably directed, for sure – smacks of cop-out when the laughs run dry again.

Grimsby is a poor show, but contains such sparing use of Cohen’s trademark shock tactics that it barely registers as gross, let alone controversial. Far more interested in committing itself to the fate of a mediocre action movie than the sub-par comedy it would otherwise be, it’s all walk and no talk.