Hitch Cock. by
Jon Dunmore © 4 Feb 2007.
This
film needs a brain-frying dose of Tom Leykis (radio "professor" with
strict set of dating tenets - "Leykis 101": "Never spend more than
$40 on dates; Three-date limit until tail; Never sleepover at your place; No gifts
ever to booty calls and women you date; Do not change who you are for a woman;
No weekend dates unless guaranteed sex; Your income level determines your date's
level on a 1 to 10 scale - more income = higher number
"). Dating
guru, Alex "Hitch" Hitchens (Will Smith, in customary Mr. Nice Guy gear,
arguably the black Tom Hanks), runs
a thriving "consultancy" business offering advice to introverted guys
on how to score A-List women. Known in hush-hush circles as The Date Doctor, his
own dating life suffers a muscle cramp when he meets a lowlife scum whore (i.e.
a gossip journalist) in the form of Sara (Eva Mendes, looking quite "rumpy,"
wearing a pushup bra that can't possibly be comfortable).
Let
me guess: they meet, they likey, they fighty, they marry. Underscoring
the egregious romantic claptrapping are Hitch's "basic principles" for
dating: "No matter what, no matter where, no matter who, any man has a chance
to sweep any woman off her feet." A strong start, but then reads like a vanilla
Tom Leykis, shying from all the darker social realities like self-esteem, insecurities,
financial hooks, Oedipal and Electra complexes, and conveniently avoiding the
fact that to "win" this out-of-your-league woman, you have to begin
with deceit (i.e. NOT being yourself). This
movie's monotonous agenda is to once again push the moribund precept of Marriage
Equals Happiness. No matter the disparate backgrounds of the married pair. Firstly,
women "out of your league" are never going to be your "soul mate";
they surf shark-infested waters miles above your tiny pond. This
doesn't seem to matter to Albert (Kevin James), an accountant who desires heiress,
Allegra (Amber Valletta). Adhering strictly to Insufferable Romantic Movie Protocol,
when a pathetic character like Albert exclaims his "love" for a woman
he's never met, we are meant to believe wholeheartedly and goodsomely in his sincerity,
as Hitch does. "Stalker" is only a word on the 6 o'clock news.
Snappily written by Kevin Bisch (placing words in the lead chick's mouth way too
witty for a real life woman to ever utter during a pick up), adequately directed
by Andy Tennant, there
are actually two laugh-out-loud moments in Hitch, both surprisingly involving
Kevin James (whose long-running sitcom, The King of Queens is about twice
as funny as Everybody Loves Raymond - which means it isn't funny at all):
there's something inherently disturbing about a Fat Man-Dance, and James milks
it like prize-winning cow-teats ("The q-tip, the q-tip, throw it away");
and our lips scrunch in sympathetic fervor when Smith teaches James how to lean
in for The First Kiss ("Go 90-percent and wait for her to come the other
10-percent"). Hitch
(his name cunningly allusive to "getting hitched" - and he's a confirmed
bachelor, get it? That's almost as ironic as The King of Queens) eventually
recants his "basic principles," even though the whole movie has been
based on them: "If she jangles her keys she's interested," "Women
relate dancing to sex," "Treat it mean, keep it keen" (that last
is not one of Hitch's; it's one of mine, but you can have it gratis). There
is the standard man-hating chick-whining (once again, the female double standard
allowing Sara to get away with kneeing a man in the groin - with no repercussions)
and the usual misogyny-disguised-as-thoughtfulness ("Of course she's going
to lie to you - she doesn't want to hurt your feelings") - but the movie
ultimately preaches to both its choirs. And, of course, there's the gay friend
(simply for the audience to laugh at for being gay). Ask any Southern
Californian - they'll tell you the REAL Date Doctor is Tom Leykis.
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