Liar
Liar (1997)
Rated PG13
Starring: Jim Carrey, Maura Tierney, and
Cary Elwes
Rating:

out
of

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Liar
Liar marks Jim Carrey's return from his "darker" role
in last summer's disappointing The Cable Guy, which turned off many Carrey
fans and did little to attract new ones. Liar Liar presents us with the
lighter, less psychotic, but in no way less manic, Carrey.
The story is centered around Fletcher Reede (Carrey), a lawyer who's
been making a big splash at his firm. He's garnered so much attention,
he's being considered as a partner. His success has come at the expense
of his family life. He's been divorced from Audrey (Maura Tierney) as
a result of his sleeping around, but he's also losing touch with his son,
Max (Justin Cooper). He's constantly breaking promises to Max to devote
more time to his increasing workload. After Fletcher misses his son's
party, Max makes a wish that his dad cannot tell a lie for one full day.
The wish comes true at a particularly
bad time -- Fletcher has just had sex with the woman who can secure
his future as partner in the law firm.
In a situation that would call for his sleaziest line, Fletcher says, "I've
had better." From then on, the movie is in high gear as Fletcher
struggles to get through a complete day without being able to tell even
the smallest fib. For an any normal adult, that would be fairly difficult.
For a lawyer that brags that he could get a burglar a $10,000 settlement
for being injured while robbing a house, making it through a day without
lying is nearly impossible.
Carrey's facial contortions and expressions are taken to the limit in
this film. Watching him in action is really something to behold, especially
in a sequence that takes place in a men's room at the courthouse. When
he's on, he's a man possessed to do anything to get a laugh. A cheap laugh,
usually, but a laugh nonetheless.
The rest of the cast, as in
the case in most of Carrey's films, simply show up, say their lines
and stand back and watch Carrey go at his material
with intensity of a rabid animal. Cary Elwes is sort of the anti-Carrey
as Jerry, Audrey's "semi-serious" boyfriend. He looks completely
dorky as he tries to convince Audrey and Max to move with him to Boston.
His attempt to do "the claw," a bit that Fletcher does with
Max is hilariously devoid of Carrey's manic energy.
This is Carrey's best movie, but that doesn't make it a great film. His
movies have little to make you want to see them again, because the laughs
simply come from the surprise of him doing something completely unusual.
The story isn't particularly strong or interesting. The idea behind the
story is wonderful, but is used here to simply get Carrey's character
into jams and then gets him out of them with a really sappy ending. I'd
rather have seen the movie explore the idea of not being able to lie and
dispensing with the romantic drivel that weighs Liar Liar down.
Still,
if you're a Jim Carrey fan, you're probably not looking for anything
other than a good time and Liar Liar does deliver that.
Trivia: If
you're wondering where you've seen Cary Elwes before, he was the "bad" tornado
chaser in Twister as well as Westley in The Princess Bride. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |