Carrey accentuates the positive in ‘Yes Man’
Disarming comedy keeps the laughs coming with brisk efficiency
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Carrey stars as Carl, a guy whose life has gone into a deep, deep rut since his wife dumped him years ago. (Not for nothing is Journey’s “Separate Ways” his ringtone.) After he’s passed over for a promotion and his best friend Peter (Bradley Cooper) chides him for disengaging from life, Carl takes another pal’s advice and attends a self-help seminar that encourages him to start saying “yes” to life — literally. At the seminar, he makes a covenant to say yes to every request that comes his way.
At first, it looks like his new positivity will lead him to disaster, as he gives a homeless guy a lift that leaves him with an empty gas tank and a dead cell-phone battery. But at the gas station, he has a meet-cute with the free-spirited Allison (Zooey Deschanel), which leads Carl to think there might be something to all this “yes” business after all.
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Granted, you won’t be biting your nails in suspense over the outcome, but “Yes Man” (based on Danny Wallace’s memoir) sets up lots of pitfalls that it deftly avoids. Deschanel’s Allison is lively and open to new experiences, but she never feels like one of those “kooky,” loud-hat-wearing Hollywood creations we’ve seen in a million movies, in spite of her cutesy scooter helmet. Carl’s neighbor Tilly (Fionnula Flanagan) is a sexy senior citizen, but she’s never the butt of the joke, since young men start clamoring for her favors. Even Carl’s ex-wife (Molly Sims) avoids winding up as the shrew or vamp you might expect from a lazier batch of screenwriters.
It’s these little moments of avoiding the obvious that made me forgive “Yes Man” its occasional forays into cliche. Any movie that throws in a random musical number featuring Luis Guzman can’t be all bad, right?
Whether it’s the script, the strong supporting cast (which also includes John Michael Higgins, Terence Stamp and “Flight of the Conchords” co-star Rhys Darby) or the direction by Peyton Reed, Carrey gives one of his loosest and least oppressive performances in recent memory. He gives Carl a wonderfully acrid sarcasm in the early scenes only to blossom into a charming romantic lead who never overdoes the rubber-faced shtick.
Yes. Really.
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