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‘Couples Retreat’ is not a trip worth taking

Film veers back and forth between crude humor and poignant moments

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  ‘Couples Retreat’
Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau, Kristen Bell, Jason Bateman and Kristin Davis star in this comedy about four couples go to a tropical island resort where they must take group therapy sessions.
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REVIEW
By Christy Lemire
updated 6:09 p.m. ET Oct. 7, 2009

LOS ANGELES - “Couples Retreat” suggests what life might have been like if the guys from “Swingers” had grown up, moved to the suburbs and turned into lame, sitcommy cliches.

Jon Favreau and Vince Vaughn team up again, on screen and on the script (along with Dana Fox), for this broad comedy about four couples who go on a tropical vacation together.

In theory, they’re all there to support their friends Jason (Jason Bateman) and Cynthia (Kristen Bell) as they try to save their marriage through the couples’ counseling the resort offers. Little do they know they’ll get sucked into agonizing therapy sessions that reveal their own rifts. For example: Vaughn’s character, Dave, doesn’t care about picking out tile to redo the kitchen. His wife, Ronnie (Malin Akerman), does. It’s a laugh riot if you think Paul Reiser’s “Couplehood” is funny — and we haven’t even gotten to their painfully cute young son whose defining personality trait is urinating and pooping in inappropriate places.

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Starring: Vince Vaughn, Jason Bateman, Kristen Bell, Jon Favreau
Directors: Peter Billingsley
Run time: 1 hour, 50 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13

Under the direction of Peter Billingsley (Ralphie from “A Christmas Story”), another longtime Vaughn friend and collaborator making his first feature, “Couples Retreat” veers back and forth in a jarring way between crude sexual humor and supposedly poignant moments. The couples endure forced nudity and a wildly erotic yoga class; Favreau’s character, Joey, and his wife, Lucy (Kristin Davis), who married right after high school, each try to get it on with their respective massage therapists. But all must also bare their souls, which feels wedged-in and unconvincing compared to the proliferation of physical humor.

Faizon Love rounds out the group as the divorced Shane, who brings along his 20-year-old girlfriend, Trudy (Kali Hawk), a shrill party girl who likes to call him “Daddy” and pour hot wax on his naked chest.

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  'Couples Retreat' review
Oct. 9: Entertainment Weekly's Owen Gleiberman reviews the new Vince Vaughn comedy, "Couples Retreat."

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Each of these characters is exactly the same person the whole way through, until one night when they all magically experience an epiphany that makes them more communicative, patient and loving. During such moments, a distracting, feel-good score — surprisingly from “Slumdog Millionaire” Oscar-winner A.R. Rahman — pipes in early and often.

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  Vince Vaughn on ‘Couples Retreat’
Oct. 8: TODAY’s Meredith Vieira talks to actor Vince Vaughn about his new comedy, “Couples Retreat.”

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“Couples Retreat” makes fun of the people who run the place, including the New Age-y mastermind, Monsieur Marcel (Jean Reno in a braided tail and a Speedo), and the condescending concierge, Sctanley (Peter Serafinowicz) — spelled with a “c.” But ultimately it embraces the very lessons the resort is trying to teach. It also finds time for a little shameless product placement along the way: an extended ad for “Guitar Hero,” right as the movie is approaching its big, revelatory climax.

A few funny lines and ideas emerge here and there — the rigid Jason’s fondness for PowerPoint presentations is vaguely amusing — but “Couples Retreat” mostly feels repetitive and overlong at nearly two hours. You wouldn’t mind getting voted off this island.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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