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Saving Silverman (2001) Movie Information:
Saving Silverman (2001) Directed by:
Dennis Dugan
Saving Silverman (2001) Written by:
Hank Nelken, Greg de Paul
Saving Silverman (2001) Cast:
Jason Biggs, Steve Zahn, Jack Black, Amanda Peet, Amanda Detmer, R Ermey, Neil Diamond, Kyle Gass, Norman Armour, Colin Foo
Saving Silverman (2001) U.S. Distributor:
Columbia Pictures
Saving Silverman (2001) U.K. Distributor:
Sony Pictures
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Saving Silverman (2001) Synopsis:

Darren Silverman, Wayne Le Fessier and J.D. McNugent have been best friends since the fifth grade. From grade school (when they were all picked on), to high school (when Wayne played on the football squad, J.D. was the team's mascot and Darren was its star cheerleader), to today (rocking side by side in "Diamonds in the Rough", their Neil Diamond cover band), these guys have always stuck together. Now, enter Judith, a great-looking but cold-hearted and manipulative psychiatrist who digs her claws into sweet-natured Darren, snatches him from the friendship and even breaks up the band. First, J.D. and Wayne attempt to distract Darren by reuniting him with his high school love, Sandy, who in only a short time plans to take her religious vows and become a nun. But the stranglehold Judith has on Darren is too strong. In a desperate and hilarious last-ditch attempt to save their friend from Judith's grip - and after receiving some ill-advised help from their take-no-prisoners high school football coach - Wayne and J.D. kidnap Judith and fake her death, leaving Darren free to fall for Sandy. Judith, however, doesn't stay down for long. Demonstrating cunning and kick-ass karate moves that leave her captors in the dust, Judith escapes and pulls Darren back under her control. But just before the contentious couple takes their wedding vows, a hero arrives in an unexpected form - Neil Diamond, who is recruited by J.D. and Wayne to help save the day.

Saving Silverman (2001) Movie Review:

I'm not sure which is worse, hating a movie or feeling an immeasurable sense of pity for the actors involved. As I left the theatre following a screening of "Saving Silverman", feelings of intense hatred didn't overcome me as much as a need to commiserate the talented cast. How on earth did they manage to get lassoed into this mess?

A "Porkys" with half the intellectual wit, "Saving Silverman" centers around three dimwits ... actually, make that two dimwits and a sniveling wimp. Wayne (Steve Zahn), J.D. (Jack Black), and Darren (Jason Biggs) have been best friends since grade school. They've aged in years but not in maturity. The boys still get together every weekend with their beer bongs in tow, partying intensely while still holding out hope that their band (called Diamonds in the Rough after their idol, Neil Diamond) will someday emerge successful. Everything is smooth until Darren becomes engaged to Judith (Amanda Peet), an ice-cold psychologist who prides herself in being the puppetmaster to Darren's puppet. Wayne and J.D. decide she's not right for their best friend, so they devise a plan to kidnap her. In the process, they aim to reunite Darren with the only girl he ever loved in high school, the flighty but good-natured Sandy (Amanda Detmer). The problem? Sandy is about to become a nun. Luckily for our goofy heroes, she hasn't taken her chastity vows yet, so there is still a chance. Oh boy!

The movie doesn't execute jokes as much as painfully try to squeeze them from its empty script. Here's an example of a would-be comic exchange, as Wayne chastises J.D. for not answering the repeated ring of the doorbell:

Wayne: "Why didn't you answer the door?"
J.D.: "I was eating. I never answer the door when I'm eating."
Wayne: "I didn't know that."
J.D.: "You also didn't know I was gay."
Wayne: "What else haven't you told me?"
J.D.: "I have three balls."

The film is full of exchanges like the above. When I watch a movie like this, I wonder if the filmmakers themselves actually find the material funny. Unlike the Farrelly brothers who seek out ways to push the envelope of humor, director Dennis Dugan ("Big Daddy") and writers Hank Nelken and Greg DePaul seem to be second-guessing what a viewer might find funny. There are some relatively decent touches including R. Lee Ermey as a twisted football coach who ends up assisting the boys in their endeavor; and a cameo by Neil Diamond himself. But touches like those aren't developed in a manner that evokes enormous laughter; instead, they are just a mere distraction from the ineptitude surrounding the rest of the film.

The real tragedy to this "comedy" is watching a brilliant cast go down in flames. They include Jack Black ("High Fidelity"), Steve Zahn ("Happy, Texas"), Jason Biggs ("American Pie"), and Amanda Peet ("The Whole Nine Yards"). The only good thing about being in a movie of this sort is that on some level, they'll all automatically rebound with their next effort.

I know it's supposed to be a screwball comedy. But successful stupid humor doesn't derive from ineptitude behind the camera. There is a method to the madness in the works of the people like the Farrelly's. "Saving Silverman" has absolutely no method whatsoever, and the madness was felt more by me.

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Saving Silverman (2001) review written by: Michael Brendan McLarney

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