‘Hot Rod’ revs up for silly summer fun
Flick doesn’t take its triumph-of-the-loser plot seriously for a second
![]() Paramount Pictures Would-be stuntman Rod Kimble (Andy Samberg) and his girl Denise (Isla Fisher) in "Hot Rod." |
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That’s the motto of Rod Kimble (Andy Samberg), a would-be stuntman who aspires to be the next Evel Knievel. The fact that “Hot Rod’s” title runs over a freeze-frame of Rod jumping his moped off a short curb should tell you how good he is at the stunt game. Nonetheless, when Rod’s stepfather Frank (“Deadwood’s” Ian McShane) needs a heart transplant, Rod decides to raise the money by jumping 15 school buses, thereby breaking Knievel’s record. (Rod also wants Frank to recover in the hopes that he may one day best the old man in hand-to-hand combat and thus win his respect.)
If the thought of seeing a comedy featuring a current star of “
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Meanwhile, if you came to “Hot Rod” to see some impressive auto stunt work, you’re in the wrong theater, and should consider sneaking into the breathtaking “Bourne Ultimatum” instead.
The movie’s script isn’t as smart as, say, anything with Judd Apatow’s name on it, and the bleary cinematography by Andrew Dunn is dingy, perhaps intentionally so. But director Akiva Schaffer, a longtime collaborator of Samberg’s who directed the now-legendary “Lazy Sunday” and “D--k in a Box” videos for “SNL,” maintains a brisk pace (the movie runs a lean 88 minutes) and bolsters the action with a hilarious supporting cast of vets (McShane, Sissy Spacek), comedy up-and-comers (Will Arnett, Isla Fisher, Bill Hader), and newcomer Jorma Taccone (another longtime Samberg associate — he wrote the hummable tunes for both of the aforementioned videos).
Ultimately it’s Samberg, whose youthful enthusiasm and infectious goofiness has been one of “SNL’s” strongest assets of late, who makes the whole thing work. Whether he’s setting himself on fire to entertain at a kiddy birthday party or turning the phrase “cool beans” into a piece of turntable-scratching performance art, Samberg bends over backwards (at times literally) to get a laugh. And more often than not, he earns them, making the whole movie go “Vroom.”
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